냉동 어린 양 다리살 뼈 포함, 냉동 어린 양 목심 뼈 포함, 냉동 어린 양 갈비 뼈 포함, 냉동 어린 양 안장살 뼈 포함, +3
HS 코드
020442
최종 업데이트
2026-05-16
서치 및 소싱 팀을 위한 핵심 요약
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단 마켓 커버리지는 133개 국가에 걸쳐 있습니다.
이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 353개와 수입업체 537개가 색인되어 있습니다.
3,457건의 공급업체 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
현재 프리미엄 공급업체 0개와 카탈로그 항목 0개가 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 0건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2024입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-05-16.
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단에 대한 글로벌 공급업체 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 3,457건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 중국 (+177.5%), 미국 (+157.2%), 멕시코 (+144.6%)입니다.
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-06 기준으로 냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-11 기준, 노출 가능한 냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 남아프리카 (18.04 USD / kg), 베트남 (15.27 USD / kg), 싱가포르 (12.49 USD / kg), 뉴질랜드 (12.24 USD / kg), 미국 (11.63 USD / kg), 외 8개국입니다.
냉동 뼈 포함 어린 양고기 절단의 원산지-도착지 무역 흐름을 금액, 물량, 점유율 기준으로 분석해 수요 측 소싱 채널을 모니터링하세요.
Classification
Product TypeRaw Material
Product FormFrozen
Industry PositionPrimary Agricultural Product
Raw Material
Commodity GroupSheepmeat (Lamb/Mutton)
Scientific NameOvis aries
PerishabilityMedium to High (frozen storage stabilizes quality, but product becomes highly perishable once thawed and is sensitive to cold-chain failures).
Growing Conditions
Pasture-based and mixed pasture/feed systems across temperate grasslands and rangelands
Production strongly influenced by rainfall, pasture growth, and feed availability
Main VarietiesLamb, Mutton, Hogget
Consumption Forms
Retail bone-in cuts (e.g., leg, shoulder, rack) sold frozen or thawed for display
Foodservice portions and primals for roasting/grilling
Further processing into prepared meals or seasoned items after thawing
Grading Factors
Cut specification and weight range by primal/sub-primal
Fat cover and trim level
Bone integrity and packaging condition
Lean color and odor after thaw
Hygiene and compliance with destination SPS and customer standards
Planting to HarvestLivestock cycle: lamb is typically slaughtered within the first year, while mutton comes from older sheep; timing depends on production system, pasture conditions, and market signals.
Market
Frozen bone-in lamb cuts are a globally traded red-meat commodity that relies on certified slaughter, cold-chain integrity, and sanitary/phytosanitary (SPS) compliance for cross-border access. Export availability is concentrated in a small set of large, export-oriented suppliers—especially Australia and New Zealand—while demand spans East Asia (notably China), the Middle East (often with halal requirements), and high-income retail/foodservice markets. Trade is shaped by herd/flock cycles and pasture conditions, with drought and feed costs influencing slaughter volumes and exportable surplus. Because meat trade is highly sensitive to animal-health status, outbreaks (and the resulting market access restrictions) can disrupt shipments quickly and redirect global flows.
Market GrowthMixed (medium-term outlook)Demand growth varies by region, with import demand influenced by consumer preferences, price competitiveness versus other proteins, and market access conditions.
Major Producing Countries
중국Largest sheep inventory and major sheepmeat producer; much production is domestically consumed.
호주Major sheepmeat producer with significant export orientation and industrial processing capacity.
뉴질랜드Export-focused sheepmeat producer with strong cold-chain and market access programs.
터키Large regional producer with substantial domestic demand; trade flows can vary by policy and supply.
영국Significant producer within Europe; trades both intra-regionally and with global suppliers.
Major Exporting Countries
호주Core global supplier of frozen sheepmeat cuts, with wide market access across Asia and the Middle East.
뉴질랜드Historically one of the most export-reliant sheepmeat industries; major supplier of frozen cuts.
아일랜드Notable European exporter, supplying regional markets with standardized carcass and cut specifications.
스페인Exports within Europe and to Mediterranean markets; trade depends on seasonal supply and category mix.
우루과이Smaller but established exporter of sheepmeat, including frozen bone-in products.
Major Importing Countries
중국Major import market for sheepmeat, sourcing heavily from Australia and New Zealand.
미국High-value import market for lamb cuts, supplied primarily by Australia and New Zealand.
아랍에미리트Regional trading and consumption hub for imported frozen halal-aligned meat products.
사우디아라비아Large Middle East import market with halal and SPS requirements influencing approved suppliers.
영국Imports from Southern Hemisphere suppliers to complement domestic and seasonal supply.
Supply Calendar
New Zealand:Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, AprSeasonal lamb supply linked to Southern Hemisphere production cycles; supports Northern Hemisphere demand windows via frozen exports.
Australia:Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec, Jan, FebSupply seasonality varies by region and pasture conditions; slaughter volumes can shift with drought and feed availability.
United Kingdom / Ireland (Northern Europe):Apr, May, Jun, Jul, AugSpring and summer lamb supply in temperate systems; trade includes both fresh/chilled and frozen formats depending on market and logistics.
Southern South America (Uruguay / Argentina):Oct, Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, MarSouthern Hemisphere counter-seasonal window with smaller global share than Australia/New Zealand.
Specification
Major VarietiesLamb (younger sheep; typically milder flavor), Mutton (older sheep; stronger flavor), Hogget (intermediate category used in some markets)
Physical Attributes
Bone-in primal or sub-primal cuts (e.g., leg, shoulder, rack) where bone integrity affects presentation and handling
Frozen state reduces microbial growth during storage but requires strict cold-chain control to prevent drip loss and quality degradation after thawing
Fat cover and lean color are key visual acceptance factors in many import markets
Compositional Metrics
Lean-to-fat ratio and fat cover targets are commonly specified by buyers by cut and destination market segment
Ultimate pH and water-holding characteristics influence eating quality and purge after thawing
Grades
Australia: AUS-MEAT trade language and specifications are widely used in export documentation for cut description and compliance
European markets: carcass conformation and fat class schemes (e.g., EUROP-style classification) influence upstream sorting
Market-specific quality, labeling, and inspection requirements apply at destination under SPS controls
Packaging
Vacuum-packed bone-in cuts (consumer or foodservice formats) commonly packed into labeled master cartons for export
Carton and liner specifications are designed to minimize freezer burn and protect bone ends during handling
Lot coding and traceability identifiers are standard in export shipments
ProcessingFreezing and frozen storage are core preservation steps for international shipment; temperature abuse (including thaw–refreeze events) can cause texture damage, dehydration, and higher drip lossBone-in products may require additional protective measures (e.g., padding, bone-guard materials) to reduce punctures and packaging failures
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Live animal procurement -> slaughter and veterinary inspection -> chilling -> cutting and portioning -> freezing -> packaging and labeling -> cold storage -> reefer transport (sea/air) -> import inspection/clearance -> cold distribution -> retail/foodservice
Demand Drivers
Middle East and North Africa consumption supported by halal-aligned offerings and foodservice demand
East Asian import demand for sheepmeat, with product mix shifting between bone-in and boneless depending on price and consumer preference
Retail and foodservice preference for standardized cuts and consistent eating quality, supported by branded programs and traceability
Temperature
Frozen meat trade depends on maintaining a continuous frozen cold chain from post-freeze storage through international transport and destination warehousing
Temperature excursions can cause partial thawing, drip loss on re-freezing, and higher rejection risk at destination quality checks
Atmosphere Control
Vacuum packaging is widely used for meat cuts to reduce oxidation and dehydration; master cartons protect packs and improve pallet stability
Some supply chains use controlled handling environments and hygiene controls rather than controlled-atmosphere shipping as the primary quality lever for frozen products
Shelf Life
Frozen storage enables extended shelf life compared with chilled product, but sensory quality can deteriorate with prolonged storage or temperature fluctuations
Thawed product becomes highly perishable and typically requires rapid distribution and strict refrigeration to meet buyer specifications
Risks
Animal Disease And Market Access HighSheepmeat trade is highly sensitive to animal-health status and importing-country SPS rules. Outbreaks of transboundary diseases (e.g., foot-and-mouth disease in cloven-hoofed animals) can trigger immediate export bans or tighter certification requirements, disrupting shipments and forcing rapid reallocation of volumes across destinations.Maintain multi-origin approval lists, monitor official animal-health notifications, and structure contracts with contingency sourcing and rerouting provisions.
Supply Concentration MediumA large share of globally traded frozen lamb is supplied by a small number of export-oriented origins (notably Australia and New Zealand). Weather-driven production swings, policy changes, or processing constraints in these origins can tighten global availability and increase price volatility.Qualify secondary suppliers (e.g., Europe, South America) and use cut/spec flexibility (bone-in vs boneless, alternative primals) to manage shortages.
Cold Chain And Logistics MediumFrozen bone-in cuts require consistent cold-chain management and robust packaging to prevent temperature abuse, dehydration, and carton damage from bone ends. Logistics disruptions (port congestion, reefer shortages, or power failures) can cause quality losses and claims.Use validated packaging for bone-in products, implement temperature monitoring (data loggers), and prioritize carriers/lanes with reliable reefer performance.
Regulatory Compliance MediumImporting markets often require establishment approvals, residue control, microbiological programs, labeling rules, and documentary compliance. Non-compliance can result in holds, rejections, or delisting of plants, raising supply risk even when product is physically available.Maintain robust compliance documentation (health certificates, traceability, halal where applicable), and align specifications with destination regulatory and customer standards.
Sustainability
Greenhouse gas emissions footprint associated with ruminant livestock (methane) and increasing scrutiny of climate disclosures in meat supply chains
Drought and pasture variability affecting flock dynamics and exportable surplus in major exporting origins
Worker health and safety risks in slaughtering and processing operations (cold environments, cutting hazards)
Migrant and contract labor reliance in meat processing in some exporting regions, with reputational and compliance exposure
Religious compliance assurance (e.g., halal certification integrity) as a trust and market-access issue in key importing regions
FAQ
Which countries are the dominant global exporters of frozen lamb cuts?Australia and New Zealand are the core global exporters referenced in this record, supported by export-oriented industries and broad market access. Other exporters listed here include Ireland, Spain, and Uruguay, which tend to play smaller or more regionally focused roles.
What is the most critical risk that can abruptly disrupt international lamb trade?Animal-disease events and the resulting SPS market access actions are the most disruptive risk highlighted here. Outbreak-linked restrictions can halt or redirect exports quickly because importing markets typically require specific animal-health status and official certification.
Why does bone-in frozen lamb require specific packaging and cold-chain controls?Bone-in cuts increase the risk of punctures and damage during handling, while frozen storage and transport depend on maintaining a continuous frozen cold chain. Temperature excursions can lead to quality defects like dehydration and drip loss after thawing, increasing rejection risk.