Home?Food & Beverage? Importing Blue Sister Beer agency: How to avoid three hidden traps?
When Blue Sister Beer meets Chinese dining tables
As a veteran with two decades in beer imports, Ive witnessed countless pitfalls agents encounter when importing European craft beers. Today well take Spanish Blue Sister Beer as an example to discuss those invisible risk control points not shown on customs declarations.
Import qualifications ≠ market pass
Many agents assume obtaining(Apply 30 days in advance)andalcohol distribution recordmeans everything is settled, when in fact this is just the basic requirement:
Alcohol content labeling must comply with both EU and GB standards
Chinese back labels require 6-week advance submission for customs pre-classification
Last year a client suffered over ¥200,000 direct losses due to unlabeledpotassium metabisulfite contentresulting in entire container detention at port.
Special reminder: Unique to Lambic beerSecondary fermentation processRequires maintaining a constant temperature of 12-15°C throughout transportation. Ordinary container shipping may cause pressure changes in bottles leading to explosions.
The precision scalpel of market positioning
Based on data from 37 beer importers weve served, successful cases share these common factors:
Channel selection:
Distribution coverage in premium catering channels >60%
We resolved this by retrieving the brewerys archived1920 original recipe, coordinated with Spains Ministry of Agriculture to issueTraditional craftsmanship certification, ultimately achieving penalty-free fast clearance. This case proves professional matters require professional handling.
Beer importing is never simple trading, but requires establishingEnd-to-end control systemfrom origin to table. When holding Lambic distribution rights, find a partner who knows HS codes better than you, understands shipping risks clearer, and grasps consumer markets deeper - this is the most reliable yeast for business success.