Caixin
Nov 03, 2021 02:36 AM
BUSINESS

Diageo to Make Whisky in China Catering to Premium Drinkers

Diageo Plc will start construction next year on a 66,000 square meter (217,000 square foot) facility in Yunnan province
Diageo Plc will start construction next year on a 66,000 square meter (217,000 square foot) facility in Yunnan province

(Bloomberg) — Diageo Plc is investing $75 million to build its first whisky distillery in China, aiming to turn more local drinkers into whisky lovers in a spirits market long dominated by “baijiu” makers like Kweichow Moutai Co.

The British alcohol giant will start construction next year on a 66,000 square meter (217,000 square foot) facility in Yunnan province, aiming for completion in 2023, it said Tuesday in a statement. The distillery will produce Diageo’s first Chinese-origin, single malt whisky targeting the country’s “premium” drinkers, the company said.

Premium alcohol — including Moutai’s prized baijiu and Budweiser Brewing Co. APAC Ltd.’s premium and super premium brews — has significantly outperformed China’s overall liquor sales in the past few years, even as the pandemic kept consumers away from restaurants and bars.

“China continues to be an attractive market for us with the increased consumption occasions, the fast-growing middle class and the rising appreciation for whisky,” Sam Fischer, president of Diageo Asia Pacific and Global Travel, told Bloomberg in an interview.

International retailers are upgrading their offerings to meet the demands of a growing Chinese middle class eager for more expensive products from luxury handbags and cosmetics to higher-end beer and imported steak. Global businesses operating in China are increasingly looking toward future growth in the world’s largest consumer market as the pandemic drags down sentiment in other areas of the world.

Fischer said some details of Diageo’s new whisky — including pricing and launch information — hadn’t been decided as the liquor will need to mature for at least three years following the Yunnan distillery’s completion, according to Diageo. Still, it will be priced “well above” a whisky jointly produced by Diageo and Chinese baijiu distiller Jiangsu Yanghe Brewery Joint-Stock Co., which sells at about $50 for a half-liter bottle.

Diageo’s China ambitions are based on whisky’s solid sales growth in the mainland over the past five years. The country’s $1.7 billion whisky market — though far smaller than the $150 billion local spirits category mostly composed of baijiu — posted high single-digit growth annually from 2016 to 2019, with just a slight drop last year amid the pandemic, according to Euromonitor International.

Rival Pernod Ricard SA announced plans in 2019 to debut a new made-in-China line of malt whisky by 2023 at the earliest and build its first malt whisky distillery in the country, in Sichuan province.

China Challenge

Diageo, the owner of Johnnie Walker and Singleton, faces a key challenge in China: making whisky a desirable option for group gatherings and gift-giving holidays where baijiu has long played a key role.

“Specifically, there are cultural occasions in China such as Chinese New Year and Mid-Autumn festival,” Fischer said. “Now our goal will be to make whisky more relevant to those occasions as well.”

The distillery will be carbon neutral and recycle the water it uses, the company said, and it will have a visitor center for whisky fans.

Earlier this year, Diageo opened a logistics center in Shenzhen and announced the construction of a Shanghai-based research and development center it said would strengthen its ability to develop premium products catering to Chinese tastes.

“Our performance has been super on the back of that belief over the last three, four years in China,” Fischer said. “We’ll continue to invest to develop our brands so that we can play into that long-term growth potential.”

Contact editor Bob Simison (hello@caixin.com)

Download our app to receive breaking news alerts and read the news on the go.

Get our weekly free Must-Read newsletter.

loadingImg
You've accessed an article available only to subscribers
VIEW OPTIONS
Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code