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Food exports to China key part in Britain's post-Brexit era: Minister

Xinhua | Updated: 2017-01-05 09:58

LONDON - China has been identified as one of the top priority post-Brexit markets for British food and drink, a government minister said on Wednesday.

Andrea Leadsom, secretary of State for Environment, Farming and Rural Affairs, said that the country's food, farming and fishing industries will be having an extraordinary opportunity to "thrive".

Leadsom, in a speech at a farming conference in Oxford, spoke of the big world-wide markets beyond the EU for British food and drink.

"I saw this for myself in China, where there's a growing appetite for British food and drink. We now have our biggest export team based there, and the past year has seen a huge rise in British exports to China, up over 50 percent on 2015," she said.

Leadsom said China was just one of the priority markets Britain has identified in its international action plan.

"Food and drink is already the UK's largest manufacturing sector, adding more value to our economy than the car and aerospace industries combined," she said.

Non-EU dairy exports are up 91 percent; wheat exports are up 80 percent; and, a real triumph, British lamb was voted product of the year in France last year, added the minister.

Commenting on forthcoming Brexit talks, Leadsom told an audience of farmers: "Food, farming and our environment will be central to the success of our negotiations -- as well as to our future outside the EU.

"For too long, a bureaucratic system, which tries to meet the needs of 28 different member states, has held farmers back. Now, we have the chance to design a domestic successor to Common Agricultural Policy that works for all of you, rather than the entire European Union," she told the farmers.

Leadsom said the cutting of European red tape and Brussels bureaucracy as a potential big win for British farmers.

"I am confident that leaving the EU gives us an unprecedented opportunity to design a system that's fit for the 21st century," she said.

At the conference Leadsom announced extra government funding of nearly $150 million for a new wave of projects as part of the Rural Development Program.

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