Article Focus Summary:
This report delves into how China’s booming pesticide export trade is propelling the domestic pesticide industry toward high-quality development, emphasizing transformation, international competitiveness, and agricultural security.
China’s Pesticide Industry: Export-Led Growth and Global Impact
Pesticides play a pivotal role in global food security, and China’s pesticide industry has evolved into a cornerstone of the international supply chain. With its comprehensive industrial chain and growing technological capabilities, China has become a dominant pesticide producer and exporter. From 2020 to 2024, the country’s pesticide export volume surged from 960,000 tons to 2.06 million tons—a 2.15-fold increase—positioning China as the world’s foremost pesticide manufacturing hub.
Yet, this growth has not come without structural challenges, such as overcapacity, product homogeneity, and intensifying low-price competition. Addressing these issues requires a strategic shift: enhancing innovation, fostering brand development, and optimizing international policy alignment to secure the industry’s sustainable, high-quality future.
Strategic Opportunities and Ongoing Challenges
China’s pesticide industry is currently in a critical phase of strategic transformation. Opportunities include solid domestic supply chains and a growing presence in international markets, where China holds significant cost and technology advantages. The industry is shifting from generic manufacturing toward innovation-driven production, increasing its global competitiveness.
However, challenges persist:
- Overcapacity in certain pesticide types.
- Homogenized products lacking differentiation.
- Price wars in export markets leading to reduced profitability and lower product quality.
- Emerging international competition and trade frictions, including anti-dumping measures.
- Gaps in regulatory oversight and industry service infrastructure.
To overcome these issues, the industry must align with the “three high-level” strategic directives from the 20th Third Plenary Session:
- High-level Socialist Market Economy: Optimize resource allocation through balanced government-market dynamics.
- High-level Technological Self-Reliance: Drive compound innovation, enhance intellectual property rights, and invest in R&D.
- High-level Institutional Openness: Promote regulatory alignment, encourage international investment, and leverage multinational collaborations.
Export Evolution: From Bulk Chemicals to Brand Value
China’s pesticide exports have advanced from basic intermediates to branded formulations and services. The six phases of pesticide export maturity include: selling intermediates, technicals, branded products, brand-building, services, and standards. While the industry is still primarily in the early phases, recent data shows promise:
- For the first time in 2024, export value of formulations exceeded technicals.
- Self-branded and registered products have begun capturing international market share.
- Overseas registration of Chinese pesticide products continues to rise.
To accelerate this trend, efforts should focus on increasing formulation exports, enhancing brand presence overseas, and delivering value-added services such as agronomic consulting and pest management solutions.
Strategic Recommendations for High-Quality Export Development
- Extend the Value Chain: Encourage companies to target high-value chain segments like branded formulation exports, R&D, and customer services.
- Promote “Three Pillars” – Brand, Channel, Service: Build brand equity, expand international distribution, and enhance after-sales support.
- Support Service Trade and Foreign Investment: Explore global service markets and strategically deploy capital in overseas operations.
- Optimize Dual-Market Coordination: Maintain domestic pesticide supply to safeguard China’s food security while actively expanding global presence.
Ensuring Agricultural Security and Sustaining Global Competitiveness
China’s pesticide strategy must always prioritize food security. The country’s ability to feed its 1.4 billion citizens remains paramount. Policies should guarantee high-quality domestic pesticide supply regardless of export trends. At the same time, export strength reinforces industry health and reduces vulnerability to foreign monopolies.
To bridge domestic and international markets, companies must leverage both markets and resources. This global perspective enables Chinese firms to export innovation while absorbing best practices and technologies from abroad, thereby modernizing the domestic sector.
Strengthening Governance: Toward “Full-Chain, Full-Cycle” Management
A sophisticated management ecosystem is essential for the sustainable development of the pesticide sector. The proposed “Three Fulls and One Link” model emphasizes:
- Full-Chain Development: Aligning R&D, production, distribution, and usage to prevent bottlenecks.
- Full-Cycle Regulation: Covering all stages from production licensing to post-market surveillance and international compliance.
- Full-Entity Services: Serving producers, retailers, farmers, researchers, intermediaries, and global partners alike.
Interagency cooperation is key. While the Ministry of Agriculture leads oversight, other departments must synchronize efforts to enforce quality, safety, and legal compliance. Institutions like the Pesticide Registration Institute are pivotal in enhancing research, data standards, and global outreach.
Conclusion: A Blueprint for Global Leadership
With export growth fueling its ascent, China’s pesticide industry stands at a transformative juncture. By embracing innovation, enhancing governance, and maintaining a dual-market approach, China can solidify its leadership in the global agrochemical sector. The path forward lies in raising product quality, expanding branded exports, and securing food production at home and abroad.
As the industry evolves, it will not only bolster China’s agricultural security but also make substantial contributions to global food systems and sustainable farming.
Source: China Pesticide Industry Association










