UK lamb imports driven by frozen product categories

Published 2022년 11월 24일

Tridge summary

For September, there was a notable increase in lamb imports, rising by 19.3% to 3,600 tonnes, or 65% year-over-year, with New Zealand contributing 156% more than last year. The import volume has grown by 13% year-to-date compared to 2021. The trade data also showed a shift in preference towards frozen lamb products over fresh, with frozen bone-in lamb accounting for 55% of the total imports. On the export front, there was an 8.9% increase in fresh and frozen lamb exports in September compared to August, largely due to increased shipments to France and Belgium.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The latest trade data for September highlights increases of lamb imports on the month, with total import volumes up 19.3% from 3,000 to 3,600 tonnes. When looking at year-on-year trends for September, this is exaggerated, with imports up 65%. New Zealand product volumes grew 156% when compared to September 2021 import figures, an increase of 1,600 tonnes. From a year-to-date perspective (to September) the quantity of New Zealand product imported has increased 13% compared to 2021, an increase of 3,500 tonnes. Reviewing the imported product types, a change in seasonal trends has developed, with fresh bone-in product being significantly outperformed by frozen product categories. The frozen bone-in category accounted for 55% of the total volume (2,000 tonnes) in September with frozen boneless the next largest category, accounting for 27% of the total imported volume. Exports of fresh and frozen lamb totalled 6,200 tonnes in September, an 8.9% (500 tonne) increase from August, but a ...
Source: Ahdb

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