How Oatly is winning in Asia’s growing dairy market

Plant-based milks have swiftly infiltrated consumers’ cupboards, fridges, coffee orders and more for the best part of a decade with seemingly little effort. Oatly has loudly promoted itself as the category champion in the UK, but its move in China has given it cause for celebration.

Founded in the 1990s by Swedish Brothers, the brand has had its share of controversy and difficulty, from investor backlash, claims of misleading assertions, ads being banned and collapsing shares.

But its five-year mission to dominate in China appears to have been carried out with relative ease. This is especially poignant as dairy imports to the country dropped 12% last year to 2.6m tonnes, according to the UK’s Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board. However, in the same year domestic milk production rose 4.6% to 41m tonnes, up 28% on 2019 levels.

So, Oatly’s success could be symptomatic of a gap in the market – possibly one with space and time for other brands to exploit.

China’s dairy alternative market is set to reach $5.18bn in 2024, growing at a CAGR of over 9% to $8bn by 2029, Mordor Intelligence suggests. The soymilk market reached ¥11.37bn, the largest within the milk-alt category there and is followed by walnut and coconut with respective values of ¥10.98bn and ¥10.62bn, according to Statista.

How much oat milk is sold in China

Oat milk, however, sits at the bottom of the dairy milk alternatives sales list at less than ¥1bn. And while Oatly would not reveal its China sales, it says enough of its product was sold to make the equivalent of one billion lattes between 2018 and 2023.