"We plan to acquire an aquaculture company," Liu Yonghao, 64, said in an interview in Beijing. Though he declined to name any companies, Liu said targets need to be sizable and have good natural resources including light, water, land and low-cost labor.
Liu's comments help highlight how Chinese agriculture firms such as New Hope and State-owned China National Chemical Corp are seeing bigger appetites for overseas assets to feed the world's largest population.
New Hope alone plans to spend 10 billion yuan in the next three to five years on high-end animal protein and food-related assets overseas, spurred by demand from the nation's expanding middle class.
"We shall go abroad and use our advantages in scale and the market to do acquisitions," Liu said.
New Hope is also looking to acquire livestock-breeding companies overseas, Liu said, citing a lack of such capabilities in China and increasing domestic demand for beef, lamb and seafood.
"Every year we spend quite a lot of money importing animals such as cattle, pigs, chicken, ducks, even seafood like shrimps," said Liu.