The Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) welcomed senior Japanese buyers, importers and trade media to the UK with the aim of highlighting beef, sheep meat and pig meat production.

Delegates from Japan on British farm

Source: AHDB

The delegates visited a number of British beef and sheep farms as well as processing facilities.

It also aimed to strengthen trade relationships as it reported “growing appetite” for British meat in Japan.

The week-long visit brought delegates from Japan to farms, processors, butchery demonstrations and industry events across Shropshire, Cheshire and Worcestershire. AHDB said it gave key decision makers the chance to experience the British supply chain from farm to fork and see first-hand why demand for British red meat continues to grow in a wide portfolio of markets, including Japan.

Visits included a beef unit demonstration farm in Shropshire, where delegates saw how British beef producers are combining efficient production with high standards of animal welfare and sustainability. The programme also highlighted the role British farmers play in producing high quality meat while working in partnership with the environment.

AHDB described how Japan remained one of the world’s most valuable food import markets, as consumers place a “strong emphasis” on quality, food safety, provenance and eating experience. It said that British red meat is well placed to meet demand, particularly as interest grows in premium cuts, offal and products with strong sustainability credentials.

“Japan is an incredibly important market for British red meat because buyers there value exactly what our farmers produce so well.”

Susan Stewart, AHDB

UK red meat exports including offal were worth £2 billion in 2025, said AHDB, reportedly underlining the importance of international trade in creating value across the whole supply chain and supporting returns for producers.

AHDB went on to identify exports as critical to improving carcase balance, helping create value for cuts and offal products which often have lower domestic demand but stronger international demand.

Susan Stewart, head of international trade development at AHDB, commented: “Japan is an incredibly important market for British red meat because buyers there value exactly what our farmers produce so well: quality, consistency, high welfare standards and full traceability.

“This mission gave Japanese buyers and media the opportunity to see British agriculture up close. They met the people behind the products, visited farms and processors, and saw the care that goes into producing world-class beef, sheep meat and pig meat.

“Exports are about much more than selling product overseas. They help deliver better value across the whole carcase, strengthen demand for British red meat and create stronger returns across the supply chain for levy payers.”

The mission formed part of AHDB’s wider export development work, including in-market visits to Japan earlier this year by Henry Glover, senior trade development manager, and international trade director Jonathan Eckley, alongside a separate visit by Susan Stewart in November.

Stewart added: “Markets like Japan do not stand still. Competition is fierce, which is why continuing to build relationships, open doors and champion British red meat internationally remains so important for our farmers, processors and exporters.”