
Japanese consumers have huge appetite for Irish beef and whiskey as Government seeks to increase trade
The Taoiseach is currently in Tokyo as part of his visit to Japan, with Micheál Martin taking part in meetings with Bord Bia and IDA businesses based there.
He follows a number of other Government ministers visiting the country in recent weeks, with agriculture minister Martin Heydon and enterprise minister Peter Burke both visiting Tokyo and Osaka ahead of him.
One of the key items on the agenda on Tuesday was Mr Martin's meeting with Bord Bia businesses operating in Japan.
As future trade with the United States becomes more uncertain with tariffs, the Government is seeking to increase its trade with other nations as part of its major diversification programme.
Tánaiste Simon Harris established a new trade forum and an action plan to grow new markets for Irish exporters.
This sprint towards diversification includes countries like Japan, with Government sources highlighting the importance of the Japanese markets due to it being one of the world's largest economies.
In 2024, Ireland sent about €21.5bn worth of exports to Japan, making it our second-largest trading partner in the Asia-Pacific region.
Of that, the most significant chunk is through our exports of pharmaceutical products and med-tech, but one growth area the Government is seriously looking at is food and drink.
According to the Central Statistics Office, Irish food exports in 2024 reached €178m, which is up by 38% since the introduction of the EU-Japan Economic Partnership agreement in 2019.
This agreement gave Irish food producers better market access and slashed tariffs, particularly for key agrifood areas like meat and dairy.
Government sources have highlighted the high level of demand for Irish agricultural products in Japan, including beef.
In particular, one source highlighted the large amount of beef tongue exported into the country, with 90,000 tonnes being sent in a single year.
The market for Irish whiskey is also growing in Japan, with hundreds of thousands of barrels sent there in recent years.
Irish Whiskey Association director Eoin Ó Catháin said Japan had been identified as one of Ireland's 'more interesting markets' amid the complexities within the US market.
'Japan has been identified as one of the major markets of growth. We went from 55,000 cases [of whiskey] sold in 2020 to well over 200,000 last year,' Mr Ó Catháin said.
He said the market itself was massive, with more than 125 million people in the country, adding there were 'positive signs' for continued growth in the region.
Mr Ó Catháin said it was important the wider food and drink export industry continued to focus on market diversification.
'We have to have a two-pronged approach now. Trying to sort out the US, trying to reduce the tariffs that our companies face there is absolutely a priority,' Mr Ó Cathain said.
'What a number of companies are realising is that they need to expand and develop a bit more in other markets, so we don't end up in this situation again."
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Taoiseach to meet prime minister and lay wreath at Hiroshima on four-day visit to Japan
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