For centuries, coffee has been an essential beverage in the
lives of Westerners. As foreign companies, including Starbucks,
Costa, Nestle and Maxwell, tumble over each other to raise their
stakes in China, the predominantly tea-drinking nation is coming to
grips with the brew.
In big Chinese cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, the
image of an office worker using a laptop with a cup of coffee in
hand has reached iconic status. As coffee machines invade both
households and offices, Chinese can now enjoy countless fresh pots
without stepping outdoors.
In sharp contrast to the per-capita consumption of 600 cups of
coffee in Europe and 200 in Japan each year, a Chinese only drinks
four cups a year on average.
China's coffee consumption market is currently expanding at an
annual rate of 10 to 15 percent, alongside a rapidly developing
plantation business. Interestingly, the major producing area of
high-quality Pu'er tea, famous for its medicinal functions, in
southwest China's Yunnan Province, has become the country's primary
coffee growing region, increasing the incomes of local farmers and
farm hands.
Global coffee conglomerates have raced to Yunnan as their raw
material base. The area's Arabica coffee beans are now exported to
over 20 countries and regions including Europe, the United States
and Japan. Still a fledging sector, China's coffee industry lacks
large production capacity, its own branding and the ability to
process raw materials. This is what makes Aini Coffee's efforts so
precious. The Yunnan-based company is slowly climbing the
industrial chain through brand marketing, opening an online shop
and selling its brewed beverages at its coffee "experience
store."
Through careful selection and processing and the advancement of
its roasting technology, Aini Coffee could one day become a global
hit.
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