이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 1,790개와 수입업체 2,128개가 색인되어 있습니다.
11,530건의 공급업체 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
현재 프리미엄 공급업체 0개와 카탈로그 항목 0개가 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 5건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2026입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-05-14.
생크림에 대한 글로벌 공급업체 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 11,530건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 생크림의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
생크림 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
생크림의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
생크림의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 폴란드 (+74.3%), 덴마크 (+25.0%), 우루과이 (-19.2%)입니다.
생크림 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-06 기준으로 생크림 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-11 기준, 노출 가능한 생크림 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 이탈리아 (4.54 USD / kg), 네덜란드 (4.26 USD / kg), 스페인 (4.25 USD / kg), 독일 (4.22 USD / kg), 덴마크 (4.20 USD / kg), 외 15개국입니다.
Fresh cream is a perishable, high-fat dairy product that is traded primarily within regional refrigerated supply chains, with longer-distance trade more feasible for UHT/aseptic “long-life” cream rather than truly fresh cream. Using HS 040150 (milk and cream, not concentrated, not sweetened, fat content >10%) as a practical trade proxy, exports are concentrated in Europe, with the Netherlands and Poland among leading exporters and Germany among leading importers. Supply is structurally tied to raw milk availability and butterfat economics, so cream prices and availability can shift quickly when milk volumes change (e.g., seasonal “spring flush” dynamics in pasture-based systems). Demand is driven by household cooking, bakery/confectionery, and foodservice, with cold-chain integrity and microbiological risk management central to tradeability.
Major Producing Countries
인도Large milk producer underpinning global dairy fat supply; cream trade is more often domestic/regional due to perishability.
미국Major dairy producer with significant domestic cream consumption and industrial food-manufacturing demand.
중국Large dairy market; imports of dairy fats/cream can rise when domestic milk supply is tight or demand shifts toward Western-style bakery and beverages.
독일Large EU dairy producer and processing hub; prominent in intra-European trade flows for milk/cream categories.
프랑스Major EU dairy producer with large domestic consumption and established dairy processing capacity.
뉴질랜드Export-oriented dairy system; highly seasonal milk supply influences timing of dairy-fat processing and exports.
Major Exporting Countries
네덜란드Leading exporter in HS 040150 (milk/cream >10% fat) in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; Europe-centric distribution and logistics hub effects may inflate recorded flows.
폴란드Among leading HS 040150 exporters in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; benefits from EU single market access and expanding dairy processing capacity.
영국Notable exporter in HS 040150 UN Comtrade-derived summaries; trade is often regional and sensitive to SPS requirements and cold-chain constraints.
리투아니아Among leading HS 040150 exporters in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; participates strongly in European dairy ingredient trade flows.
덴마크Appears among leading HS 040150 exporters in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; high dairy processing specialization.
Major Importing Countries
독일Largest importer in HS 040150 UN Comtrade-derived summaries; substantial domestic processing and intra-European sourcing.
영국Important importer in HS 040150 UN Comtrade-derived summaries; relies on regional suppliers and is sensitive to animal-health trade restrictions.
이탈리아Significant importer in HS 040150 UN Comtrade-derived summaries; demand linked to food manufacturing (desserts, bakery, gelato) and retail.
체코Appears among notable HS 040150 importers in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; largely regional sourcing within Europe.
아일랜드Appears among notable HS 040150 importers in UN Comtrade-derived summaries; strong cross-border dairy trade relationships.
Supply Calendar
United Kingdom:Apr, MayMilk “spring flush” peaks in early May in Great Britain in some seasons, which can increase cream availability and pressure bulk cream prices.
New Zealand:Oct, NovPasture-based milk production is highly seasonal, with peak milk production commonly in October–November, shaping dairy-fat processing cadence.
Specification
Physical Attributes
Fat-in-skimmed milk emulsion obtained by physical separation from milk (Codex definition of cream).
Milk fat minimum 10% (w/w) for cream under Codex Standard for Cream and Prepared Creams (CXS 288-1976).
Commercial fat classes (e.g., light/single, whipping, heavy/double) vary by national regulation and buyer specification.
Grades
Codex Standard for Cream and Prepared Creams (CXS 288-1976) provides an international reference for identity, minimum composition, and permitted additive classes for cream and prepared creams.
Aseptic cartons for UHT “long-life” cream (often the format for longer-distance trade).
Foodservice bulk formats (bag-in-box, pails) for bakery and catering.
ProcessingHighly perishable: temperature abuse accelerates spoilage and increases food-safety risk.Whippability depends on fat content and processing (heat treatment and homogenization profile).
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Raw milk collection → chilled storage → centrifugal separation (cream/skim split) → fat standardization → pasteurization (or UHT for long-life cream) → cooling → hygienic filling → refrigerated distribution
Demand Drivers
Bakery, confectionery, and desserts (cream fillings, ganache, custards).
Foodservice and at-home cooking (sauces, soups, coffee/tea whitening).
Seasonal demand spikes around holidays in many markets (desserts and baking).
Temperature
Cold-chain continuity is critical for fresh cream from filling through retail/foodservice; temperature excursions can rapidly shorten usable life and trigger safety holds or recalls.
Shelf Life
Fresh pasteurized cream has a short refrigerated shelf life compared with UHT/aseptic cream, which is more suitable for long-distance shipping but competes in a different product segment.
Risks
Food Safety HighFresh cream is a high-risk refrigerated dairy matrix where temperature abuse can accelerate spoilage and increase the likelihood of pathogens; a single contamination event or cold-chain failure can trigger recalls, border rejections, and immediate supply disruptions for downstream food manufacturers and foodservice.Enforce validated pasteurization/UHT controls, strict hygienic design and CIP, routine microbiological verification (including Listeria environmental monitoring where applicable), and end-to-end cold-chain monitoring with clear hold-and-release protocols.
Animal Health MediumTransboundary livestock diseases (e.g., foot-and-mouth disease) can disrupt regional and international trade in animals and animal products and prompt import bans affecting dairy flows, tightening availability and increasing price volatility.Diversify approved-origin sourcing, monitor WOAH disease status updates, and maintain contingency plans for rapid supplier substitution and inventory buffers.
Regulatory Compliance MediumIdentity and labeling rules (dairy term use, minimum fat expectations, and additive permissions) vary across jurisdictions; non-compliance can lead to relabeling costs, import detentions, or product withdrawals.Align specifications to Codex references where accepted, validate fat content and ingredient declarations, and maintain country-specific regulatory dossiers for additives and labeling.
Price Volatility MediumCream availability and pricing are tightly linked to milk supply cycles and butterfat market balance; shifts in milk volumes, processing capacity constraints, or butter demand can rapidly swing cream prices and procurement risk for industrial users.Use indexed contracts or hedging where available, qualify multiple origins, and build formulation flexibility to substitute across dairy fat inputs when feasible.
Sustainability
Dairy greenhouse-gas footprint (notably enteric methane) and increasing climate-policy scrutiny of ruminant supply chains.
Manure management and nutrient runoff risks near intensive dairy regions.
Feed sourcing impacts (land use and embedded deforestation risk in some feed supply chains) and exposure to feed price volatility.
Energy intensity of refrigeration across the cold chain and packaging waste (single-use plastics, aseptic cartons).
Labor & Social
Worker safety in dairy processing (hot systems, CIP chemicals, slips/falls) and in farm operations.
Migrant/seasonal labor dependence in some dairy regions and associated compliance expectations (contracts, housing, overtime).
Animal welfare expectations (housing, transport, lameness management) increasingly embedded in buyer codes of conduct.
FAQ
How does Codex define “cream” in international standards?Codex describes cream as a fluid milk product comparatively rich in fat, in the form of a fat-in-skimmed milk emulsion, obtained by physical separation from milk (Codex Standard for Cream and Prepared Creams, CXS 288-1976).
What is the minimum milk fat content for a product to be called “cream” under Codex?Codex sets a minimum milk fat content of 10% (w/w) for cream in CXS 288-1976.
Are additives allowed in cream products under Codex?Codex allows certain additive classes for specified cream categories (such as stabilizers, thickeners, emulsifiers, acidity regulators, and—where relevant—packing gases/propellants), but emphasizes use only when technologically justified and consistent with product stability and the level of heat treatment applied (CXS 288-1976).