이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 1,305개와 수입업체 1,437개가 색인되어 있습니다.
2,123건의 공급업체 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
현재 프리미엄 공급업체 5개와 카탈로그 항목 0개가 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 5건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2026입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-06-04.
건조 해조류에 대한 글로벌 공급업체 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 2,123건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 건조 해조류의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
건조 해조류 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
건조 해조류의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
건조 해조류의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 인도 (-79.2%), 홍콩 (-76.2%), 칠레 (+55.1%)입니다.
건조 해조류 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-07 기준으로 건조 해조류 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-12 기준, 노출 가능한 건조 해조류 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 카자흐스탄 (36.30 USD / kg), 멕시코 (32.04 USD / kg), 대만 (15.46 USD / kg), 일본 (12.92 USD / kg), 대한민국 (10.71 USD / kg), 외 12개국입니다.
최신 5건의 건조 해조류 도매 업데이트를 활용해 현재 수출 가격 포인트와 원산지 수준 공급업체 변화를 검증하세요.
일자
항목명
단가 (USD)
2026-06-01
마른미* ****** * *** *** *** ***
12.08 USD / kg
2026-05-01
미역 ****** * *** ** ***** **
116.41 USD / kg
2026-05-01
김 (*** * *************** ****
614.53 USD / kg
2026-05-01
미역 ****** * *** ** ***** **
57.69 USD / kg
2026-05-01
미역 ****** * *** ** ***** ****
561.64 USD / kg
Classification
Product TypeIngredient
Product FormDried
Industry PositionFood Ingredient
Market
Dried seaweed is a globally traded marine ingredient used in retail foods (snacks, soup bases, seasonings) and as an input for further processing, with supply dominated by cultivated seaweeds in Asia. China, Indonesia, the Philippines, the Republic of Korea, and Japan are consistently among the largest producing countries in FAO aquaculture statistics, while trade flows concentrate around East Asian processing hubs and high-income consumer markets. Compared with fresh seaweed, drying enables longer-distance shipment and year-round merchandising, but quality is sensitive to moisture uptake and contamination controls. Market dynamics are shaped by species-specific production cycles (e.g., nori vs kelp), buyer specifications for food safety and origin traceability, and ocean-climate variability affecting aquaculture output.
Market GrowthGrowing (long-term)Long-term expansion in aquaculture output and widening use in packaged foods and ingredients, alongside increasing buyer scrutiny on safety and traceability
Major Producing Countries
중국Among the largest seaweed aquaculture producers in FAO statistics; major producer of edible kelps and nori-type products.
인도네시아Major seaweed aquaculture producer; large volumes dried for downstream processing and ingredient use.
필리핀Significant tropical seaweed cultivation, commonly traded in dried form for processing.
대한민국Major producer and exporter of dried edible seaweeds (notably nori/gim and sea mustard).
일본High-value edible seaweed production and processing; also a significant import market for specific seaweeds.
Major Exporting Countries
중국Large processor/exporter across multiple dried seaweed categories; export profiles vary by HS subheading and year.
대한민국Well-established exporter of dried/roasted seaweed products to North America and Asia.
인도네시아Major exporter of dried seaweed raw material for further processing (including hydrocolloid value chains).
필리핀Exports dried tropical seaweed used as an industrial food ingredient input.
칠레Important supplier of certain kelp/seaweed products; mix of wild harvest and cultivation depending on species and regulation.
Major Importing Countries
미국Large consumer market for dried seaweed snacks and Asian cuisine ingredients; imports span multiple HS lines.
일본Imports specific seaweeds and semi-processed inputs alongside domestic production; trade patterns are species- and quality-segment dependent.
중국Imports certain seaweed inputs for processing depending on price/availability and product segment.
대한민국Imports occur for particular products/inputs even as the country exports finished dried seaweed items.
Supply Calendar
Northeast Asia (Japan, Republic of Korea, northern China) — nori-type seaweeds:Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, MarTemperate-season production commonly peaks in late autumn through early spring; drying and inventory smooth retail supply.
Northeast Asia (China, Japan, Republic of Korea) — kelp/kombu-type seaweeds:Apr, May, Jun, Jul, AugPeak periods vary by species and latitude; much of the trade is stabilized via dried storage formats.
Tropical Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Philippines) — tropical red seaweeds (processing inputs):Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, DecCultivation can be near year-round but is sensitive to monsoon seasonality, storms, and disease events; dried form is the common traded state.
Low-moisture dried format (sheets, strips, flakes, granules, whole fronds) where moisture barrier integrity strongly affects crispness and microbial stability
Color and uniformity (deep green/black for nori sheets; dark brown/olive for kelp/wakame products) are common quality cues for buyers
Foreign matter control (sand, shells, small stones) is a key handling and sorting requirement for dried seaweed lots
Compositional Metrics
Moisture and water activity targets are central to shelf-life performance and mold risk management
Iodine content can be materially high and variable by species and origin; buyer and regulatory scrutiny may apply to labeling and intake guidance
Inorganic arsenic and other heavy metals (e.g., cadmium, lead, mercury) are monitored in some seaweed categories and jurisdictions, influencing market access
Grades
Food-grade vs processing-grade segmentation is common in trade; premium grades emphasize uniform sheets/leaf integrity, color, and low defect rates
Microbiological and contaminant specifications are typically set by buyers to align with destination food safety requirements
Packaging
Moisture- and oxygen-barrier pouches or laminated bags for retail-ready seaweed, often with desiccants where permitted/used by industry practice
Bulk cartons or bales with inner liners for industrial/ingredient supply, designed to prevent moisture pickup and physical breakage in transit
ProcessingRehydration performance (time, texture retention) is a frequent functional spec for wakame/kelp ingredient buyersFor snack/retail segments, roasting level and seasoning adherence (if applicable) drive sensory quality and repeat purchase
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Aquaculture (or regulated wild harvest, depending on species/origin) -> landing/initial cleaning -> washing and sorting -> drying (sun, hot-air, or hybrid) -> grading and foreign-matter removal -> packing (bulk or retail) -> export -> destination re-packing/labeling (as needed) -> distribution to retail/foodservice/ingredient users
Demand Drivers
East Asian cuisine staples and rising global adoption in home cooking and foodservice
Growth of seaweed snack products and seasoning inclusions in packaged foods
Ingredient demand for texture/flavor components and (in some segments) inputs to hydrocolloid processing chains
Temperature
Ambient transport is typical for dried seaweed, but low humidity and moisture barrier integrity are critical to prevent softening, mold, and quality loss
Avoid prolonged exposure to heat and direct sunlight during storage and distribution to protect color and flavor quality
Atmosphere Control
Moisture control (barrier films, desiccants where used, and dry warehouses) is generally more important than controlled-atmosphere shipping for dried seaweed
Shelf Life
Shelf life is primarily constrained by moisture uptake, oxidation-related flavor changes, and pest contamination in storage; packaging integrity and dry storage are key determinants
Risks
Climate HighSeaweed supply is highly exposed to ocean and coastal weather conditions (marine heatwaves, typhoons, storm surges, and water-quality shifts). Because large shares of global production are concentrated in Asian aquaculture regions, severe seasonal anomalies or extreme events can reduce yields quickly and tighten global availability for dried seaweed and downstream processors.Diversify sourcing across countries/species, build inventory buffers for key SKUs, and monitor regional ocean/climate alerts and farm-area incident reporting.
Food Safety HighContaminant risk (notably heavy metals such as inorganic arsenic in certain seaweeds, and variable iodine levels) can trigger border rejections, recalls, or labeling disputes, disrupting trade even when physical supply is available.Implement routine lot testing against destination-market limits, strengthen supplier QA and traceability, and align labeling/claims to regulator guidance in key import markets.
Regulatory Compliance MediumMarket-access requirements can differ materially by destination (contaminant limits, microbiological criteria, additive/processing aid rules for flavored/roasted products, and labeling of origin/species). Non-alignment can lead to shipment holds and rework costs.Maintain destination-specific specification sheets and COA requirements; verify HS classification and product descriptions; use importer-of-record compliance checks before shipment.
Quality Degradation MediumDried seaweed is vulnerable to moisture uptake and physical breakage, which can rapidly downgrade product value (loss of crispness for snack sheets, clumping for flakes, and mold risk in humid storage).Use validated moisture-barrier packaging, humidity-controlled warehousing, and transit practices that avoid condensation and high-humidity exposure.
Sustainability
Ocean-climate exposure: marine heatwaves, typhoons, and changing coastal water conditions can materially reduce seaweed yields and disrupt harvest windows in major producing regions
Marine debris and gear loss: ropes, floats, and plastics used in seaweed farming can contribute to local pollution if not managed and recovered
Coastal ecosystem interactions: farm siting and intensity can create localized ecological trade-offs (navigation conflicts, habitat alteration), increasing regulatory scrutiny
Labor & Social
Smallholder and coastal-community livelihood exposure to price volatility and crop losses, especially in tropical farmed seaweed supply chains
Traceability and labor transparency expectations are rising in international retail supply chains, increasing compliance burdens for fragmented producer bases
FAQ
Which countries are the major global producers of farmed seaweed used in dried seaweed trade?FAO aquaculture statistics consistently show production concentrated in Asia, with China and Indonesia among the largest producers, alongside the Philippines, the Republic of Korea, and Japan. These countries underpin much of the global availability of dried seaweed products and seaweed inputs for further processing.
What are the most common buyer specification concerns for dried seaweed in international trade?Across markets, buyers commonly focus on moisture control (to prevent softening and mold), foreign matter limits (sand/shell fragments), and food safety testing for contaminants such as heavy metals and for iodine variability where relevant. These themes align with the record’s quality and risk sections and with food-safety frameworks referenced by Codex/FAO/WHO and regional regulators.
What is the single biggest global risk that can disrupt dried seaweed supply?The most critical disruption risk is ocean-climate volatility and extreme weather affecting seaweed aquaculture in major producing regions, which can reduce yields and disrupt harvest windows. Because drying supports inventory-based trade, the shock often appears as tighter availability and higher sourcing risk when consecutive poor seasons occur.