World demand for foodservice disposables is forecast to grow 5.4 percent per year to $53.3 billion in 2015. Advances will be driven by gains in the foodservice industry, which will accelerate from the rates seen over the 2000-2010 period due to improvements in global economic conditions, increasingly fast-paced lifestyles, urbanization trends and growth in away-from-home food spending. However, great disparity in per capita foodservice expenditures will remain among the various regions, which will affect demand for disposables used in restaurants and other foodservice establishments. These and other trends, including market share and product segmentation, are presented in World Foodservice Disposables, a new study from The Freedonia Group, Inc., a Cleveland-based industry market research firm.
Disposable
serviceware -- including single-use cups, dinnerware and utensils -- will
remain the largest product type through the forecast period and beyond. The fastest demand growth is expected in the
disposable packaging segment, which includes foodservice containers, lids and
domes, wraps, bags, and trays. Demand for disposable foodservice
packaging will be fueled by rapid global expansion in the limited service
restaurant sector, which relies heavily on single-use packaging. Beyond
eating and drinking places, good opportunities for disposables will be found in
the retail market.
Some of the best opportunities will
exist in the disposable packaging segment, boosted by gains in the fast
food industry, which uses large quantities of disposables for packaging foods
consumed both on-site and off-site.
The Asia/Pacific region will see above-average gains in foodservice disposables
demand, fueled by advances in the limited service restaurant
sector. Between 2010 and 2015, China alone will account for 28 percent of
global foodservice disposables market value gains and will surpass Japan to
become the second largest market worldwide. Central and South America,
Eastern Europe, and the Africa/Mideast region will also experience
above-average advances, though growth in these areas will stem from smaller
bases. Advances will be below average in North America and Western
Europe, where markets are more mature and somewhat saturated.
Nonetheless, good opportunities will still be found in developed countries,
especially for higher-cost degradable, recycled content and other green
products in areas with bans on polystyrene foam disposables. The US,
which accounted for 37 percent of global foodservice disposables sales in 2010,
will remain the largest national market in the world by a wide margin due to
its large quick service restaurant sector.
The Freedonia Group is a leading international business research company, founded in 1985, that
publishes more than 100 industry research studies annually. This industry
analysis provides an unbiased outlook and a reliable assessment of an industry
and includes product segmentation and demand forecasts, industry
trends, demand history, threats and opportunities, competitive strategies,
market share determinations and company profiles.