EGYPT BECOMES ONE OF BRAZIL’S MAIN GARLIC SUPPLIERS
Sep, 17, 2020 Posted by Ruth HollardWeek 202038
In July 2019, Brazil opened the market for Egyptian garlic. Since then, the Arab country has become one of the main international suppliers of garlic to Brazil. Two months after the market opened in August 2019, the country was already selling garlic to Brazilians, generating US$ 2.3 million in 2019. Data from the Secretariat of Foreign Trade (SECEX) show that this year, only in the first eight months, Egyptian exports have already reached US$ 5 million.
As a result, Egypt has become Brazil’s fifth largest international garlic supplier, behind traditional suppliers such as Argentina, China, Spain and Chile. In some months of this year, the Egyptians rose to third and second position. Egypt is one of the world’s main garlic producers, in fourth place behind China, India and Bangladesh, and harvests 280,000 tons per year.
According to Michael Gamal Kaddes, Director of Trade Agreements for the Egyptian Ministry of Commerce and Industry’s Agreements and Foreign Trade division, “there are great export opportunities for Egyptian garlic in the Brazilian market.” The garlic harvest in Egypt runs from September to July, and recently, exports from the Arab country reached 40,000 tons, which generated more than US$ 42 million. Garlic is one of the oldest plants in Egypt.
According to Cesar Simas Teles, agricultural attaché at the Brazilian embassy in Cairo, Brazil imported 165,400 tons of garlic in 2019, worth US $ 225 million, a slight increase over 2018 when the Brazilian market imported 164.8 thousand tons of garlic from abroad, valued at US$ 172 million.
Source: ANBA
-
Ports and Terminals
Aug, 14, 2019
0
Ports of Paraná will be the first in the country to have decentralized management
-
Ports and Terminals
Oct, 07, 2021
0
Studies for the grain terminal at the Port of Santos are filed with TCU
-
Other Cargo
Mar, 13, 2024
0
Government inspection to assess imported milk use in Brazil
-
Oct, 25, 2020
0
Vietnam to start importing Chilean cherries