PARIS, (Reuters) – Agricultural commodity merchant Louis Dreyfus Company (LDC) said on Friday it will develop aquaculture and plant-based energy production as part of an industrial joint venture in China.
The partnership with Donlink Group to create a food industry park near the southern port of Nansha marks a further diversification by LDC in China after agreements last year with retail chain Luckin Coffee covering coffee roasting and juice distribution.
The Nansha project will involve a total 7 billion yuan ($1 billion) investment and is expected to lead to annual production worth some 22 billion yuan, LDC said in a statement after announcing the initiative on its Twitter account.
Read Also

Russia’s top agriculture official blames low global grain prices for export slowdown
Low global prices for grains, Russia’s main agricultural commodity, have caused a sharp fall in exports in recent months.
It did not say what share of the investment it would bear, or give a timeline for the project.
The industrial development would also involve feed protein processing and grain trading activities, LDC said.
Like other global grain merchants, the 169-year-old family group controlled by Margarita Louis-Dreyfus has been trying to develop food processing activities in response to declining margins for sourcing and shipping staple crops.
LDC also launched late last year a cost-cutting programme following a drop in profit it blamed on international trade tensions and the impact of a pig disease epidemic in China.