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Sport of kings a lure for nouveau riche

Updated: 2014-09-15 07:44
By CECILY LIU (China Daily)

Jo Winfield, the head of education and training at the British Horse Society, says it has been working with Hong Kong riding schools for many years but this year the Beijing riding school Equuleus International Riding Club has become BHS's first approved school on the Chinese mainland.

Winfield and her team are helping Equuleus design a curriculum and run the courses.

The courses are still entry level but she says she expects more advanced courses will eventually be available in China.

Many international equine industry programs, such as those by Darley, a thoroughbred horse racing operation controlled by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, ruler of Dubai, now welcome Chinese students.

In 2012, Darley opened the Dubai International Thoroughbred Internships program, which teaches students about thoroughbred racing and breeding, and the aim is to recruit graduates from China's top universities.

Sport of kings a lure for nouveau riche
Horse betting, a potential business in China?

Sport of kings a lure for nouveau riche 
"As the Chinese thoroughbred industry is at an early stage of development, we have decided to support China by helping their people develop the skills needed to form a foundation for the future of the industry," says James Hall, director of Darley China.

"We hope the interns will become ambassadors for the Chinese thoroughbred industry," Hall says, adding that by next June more than 60 Chinese students will have graduated from the program.

Apart from the most obvious opportunities like horse exports and training support, many other players in the British equine industry are seeking opportunities in China, including riding gear, supply equipment, and equestrian facility construction, Williams says.

She initially started to look into the Chinese market in 2010 by visiting a weeklong equestrian festival in Chengdu.

In 2012 she took a delegation of British companies to the China Horse Fair in Beijing to promote their products. The delegation attracted great interest and Williams has been organizing the trip every year since then.

The delegation consists of companies involved in various aspects of the equine industry, including riding equipment, horse supplements, saddles and infrastructure such as riding surfaces.

Last year the delegation also hosted a reception at Johnny Walker House, an ultra-luxury boutique in Beijing, in cooperation with the Beijing Equestrian Association. It also organized a day visit to some of the riding establishments in Beijing to gain a better understanding of the Chinese market, Williams says.

Although the UK has a big equine market, exports are still important for many British companies because the size of the British domestic market is vulnerable to uncontrollable factors such as disease or weather, she says.

The UK market was hit by foot and mouth disease in 2001 and a year of awful weather in 2012.

"A lot of UK companies are looking at exports because they cannot put their eggs in one basket," Williams says.

Traditionally British equine industry companies have exported heavily to Germany, North America and Australasia, but they are now looking at emerging economies such as Turkey and China.

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