Margarine thumbnail

Margarine Market Overview 2026

Derived Products
HS Code
151710
Last Updated
2026-04-14
Key takeaways for search and sourcing teams
  • Margarine market coverage spans 161 countries.
  • 1,991 exporter companies and 3,273 importer companies are indexed in the global supply chain intelligence network for this product.
  • 15,345 supplier-linked transactions are summarized across the top 20 countries.
  • 1 premium suppliers and 0 catalog items are currently listed.
  • Wholesale sample entries: 5; farmgate sample entries: 0.
  • Latest reference year in this page dataset is 2026.
  • Page data last updated on 2026-04-14.

Global Supplier Transactions, Export Activity, and Price Benchmarks for Margarine

Analyze 15,345 supplier-linked transactions across the top 20 countries, with monthly unit-price benchmarks to track export competitiveness and sourcing risk for Margarine.

Margarine Country YoY Change in Supplier Transactions and Export Momentum

Compare positive and negative YoY shifts in Margarine to identify accelerating supplier markets and weakening export corridors.
Top YoY shifts for Margarine: Russia (-76.5%), Italy (-41.8%), Uruguay (+40.6%).

Margarine Country-Level Supplier Transaction and Unit Price Summary

As of 2025-05, benchmark Margarine country transaction counts with monthly unit price and volume to prioritize supplier and export markets.
In 2025-10, countries with visible Margarine transaction unit prices: Slovakia (38.70 USD / kg), Uruguay (3.95 USD / kg), South Africa (3.51 USD / kg), Sweden (3.19 USD / kg), United States (2.72 USD / kg), 15 more countries.
CountryYoY ChangeTransaction Count2025-052025-062025-072025-082025-092025-102025-112025-122026-012026-022026-032026-04
United States-0.2%3,1312.52 USD / kg (1,043,718.336 kg)2.50 USD / kg (695,179.705 kg)2.51 USD / kg (861,568.447 kg)2.40 USD / kg (761,027.077 kg)2.76 USD / kg (497,200.464 kg)2.72 USD / kg (921,473.567 kg)
Malaysia+7.0%5261.26 USD / kg (1,459,858 kg)1.40 USD / kg (901,444.28 kg)1.39 USD / kg (1,298,941 kg)1.28 USD / kg (2,380,634 kg)1.41 USD / kg (1,431,436.92 kg)1.65 USD / kg (1,414,943.16 kg)
Indonesia+10.2%3671.16 USD / kg (563,337 kg)1.14 USD / kg (760,322 kg)1.15 USD / kg (471,705 kg)1.08 USD / kg (764,785.8 kg)1.09 USD / kg (1,234,742 kg)1.07 USD / kg (819,072 kg)
Singapore+21.7%2931.89 USD / kg (119,390 kg)1.81 USD / kg (196,731.55 kg)1.86 USD / kg (226,741 kg)2.05 USD / kg (500,321.95 kg)2.03 USD / kg (546,696 kg)1.88 USD / kg (416,010 kg)
South Africa+0.3%2,3082.74 USD / kg (38,954.242 kg)3.22 USD / kg (40,201.95 kg)2.91 USD / kg (37,086.104 kg)3.97 USD / kg (29,988.035 kg)3.27 USD / kg (63,902.185 kg)3.51 USD / kg (39,440.069 kg)
Argentina+14.2%1,7441.47 USD / kg (3,862,070.336 kg)1.40 USD / kg (6,388,272.539 kg)1.46 USD / kg (3,844,751.16 kg)1.51 USD / kg (4,034,265.479 kg)1.35 USD / kg (5,531,560.399 kg)1.50 USD / kg (4,405,518.439 kg)
Colombia+7.2%1,1221.68 USD / kg (1,252,101.862 kg)1.68 USD / kg (1,629,075.043 kg)1.80 USD / kg (1,623,515.579 kg)1.68 USD / kg (1,426,950.73 kg)1.82 USD / kg (1,681,516.799 kg)1.54 USD / kg (1,801,658.272 kg)
Brazil+1.8%8931.40 USD / kg (1,636,525.63 kg)1.25 USD / kg (548,412.2 kg)1.29 USD / kg (1,056,740.81 kg)1.38 USD / kg (1,809,360 kg)1.45 USD / kg (2,139,330.98 kg)1.50 USD / kg (1,533,849.45 kg)
Kazakhstan+10.2%5051.37 USD / kg (498,016.679 kg)1.36 USD / kg (268,342.071 kg)1.43 USD / kg (393,836.951 kg)1.37 USD / kg (534,215.66 kg)1.31 USD / kg (641,053.85 kg)1.35 USD / kg (895,683.278 kg)
Ecuador+21.7%4651.36 USD / kg (291,482.619 kg)1.46 USD / kg (531,600.218 kg)1.48 USD / kg (500,964.808 kg)1.35 USD / kg (910,331.61 kg)1.50 USD / kg (866,697.842 kg)1.30 USD / kg (338,477.121 kg)
Margarine Global Supply Chain Coverage
5,264 companies
1,991 exporters and 3,273 importers are mapped for Margarine.
Exporters and importers can use Tridge Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to identify counterparties for Margarine, benchmark reach, and prioritize outreach by market.

Margarine Export Supplier Intelligence, Trade Flows, and Price Signals

1,991 exporter companies are mapped in Tridge Supply Chain Intelligence for Margarine. Exporters and importers can use company profiles and analytics to evaluate supplier coverage, trading activity, and route opportunities.

Margarine Verified Export Suppliers and Premium Partners

1 premium Margarine suppliers include country, industry, and contactability signals to prioritize credible export partners faster.
Bakels Sweden AB
Sweden
Food Manufacturing
Become a Premium Supplier to join the Tridge Supply Chain Network and advance your marketing and export channel strategy.

Margarine Top Exporters and Supplier Profiles

Review leading exporter profiles while benchmarking against 1,991 total exporter companies in the Margarine supply chain intelligence network. Exporters and importers can unlock company profiles and analytics to qualify partners faster.
(Maldives)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Export Partner Companies: 1
Employee Size: 51 - 100 Employees
Sales Revenue: USD 1M - 5M
Industries: OthersBeverage ManufacturingFood WholesalersFood PackagingFood ManufacturingFood Services And Drinking Places
Value Chain Roles: HORECATradeRetailFood ManufacturingDistribution / Wholesale
(Mexico)
Latest Export Transaction: 2025-12-23
Recently Export Partner Companies: 4
Sales Revenue: USD 10M - 50M
Industries: Food Wholesalers
Value Chain Roles: Distribution / WholesaleTrade
(Spain)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Export Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Food ManufacturingBeverage Manufacturing
Value Chain Roles: Food ManufacturingTrade
(Turkiye)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-03-14
Industries: Beverage ManufacturingFood ManufacturingOthers
Value Chain Roles: Food ManufacturingOthers
(Turkiye)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Export Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Others
Value Chain Roles: Trade
(Russia)
Latest Export Transaction: 2025-11-18
Recently Export Partner Companies: 1
Employee Size: Over 1000 Employees
Sales Revenue: USD Over 1B
Industries: Beverage ManufacturingFood WholesalersFood Manufacturing
Value Chain Roles: TradeFood ManufacturingDistribution / Wholesale
Margarine Global Exporter Coverage
1,991 companies
Exporter company count is a key signal for Margarine supply depth and sourcing optionality.
Use Supply Chain Intelligence analytics to narrow Margarine opportunities by country, product, and value-chain role, then open company profiles to validate fit.

Top Exporting Countries for Margarine (HS Code 151710) in 2024

For Margarine in 2024, compare export volume and value across the top 10 supplier countries to map core supply structure.
RankCountryVolumeValueReport
1Poland180,542,276 kg286,288,038 USDView →
2Belgium113,296,578.82 kg205,959,094.462 USDView →
3Netherlands57,402,896.346 kg116,216,568.943 USDView →
4Denmark34,943,126 kg73,627,110.702 USDView →
5Germany35,491,503 kg67,072,793.235 USDView →
6Spain37,257,302.462 kg62,135,431.264 USDView →
7Malaysia40,940,243.81 kg58,244,334.65 USDView →
8Italy30,564,617 kg52,402,870.897 USDView →
9Brazil31,723,378 kg50,877,579 USDView →
10Turkiye36,842,040 kg48,256,209 USDView →

Margarine Export Trade Flow and Partner Country Summary

Track Margarine exporter-to-importer flows by value, volume, and share to uncover high-potential export routes.

Margarine Import Buyer Intelligence, Demand Signals, and Price Benchmarks

3,273 importer companies are mapped for Margarine demand intelligence. Use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to prioritize buyers, distributors, and downstream demand partners by market.

Margarine Top Buyers, Importers, and Demand Partners

Review leading buyer profiles and compare them against 3,273 total importer companies tracked for Margarine. Exporters and importers can use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to evaluate buyer quality and demand concentration.
(Mexico)
Latest Import Transaction: 2025-08-07
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Others
Value Chain Roles: -
(Bangladesh)
Latest Import Transaction: 2026-02-09
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Food PackagingBrokers And Trade AgenciesFood Manufacturing
Value Chain Roles: -
(Mongolia)
Latest Import Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Food Wholesalers
Value Chain Roles: -
(Argentina)
Latest Import Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Food PackagingCrop ProductionFood ManufacturingFood WholesalersBeverage Manufacturing
Value Chain Roles: -
(Mexico)
Latest Import Transaction: 2025-12-19
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Food WholesalersFood PackagingFood Manufacturing
Value Chain Roles: -
(Tajikistan)
Latest Import Transaction: 2026-03-14
Recently Import Partner Companies: 1
Industries: Others
Value Chain Roles: -
Global Importer Coverage
3,273 companies
Importer company count highlights the current depth of demand-side visibility for Margarine.
Use Supply Chain Intelligence analytics and company profiles to identify active Margarine buyers, compare partner density by country, and refine GTM priorities.

Top Import Demand Countries for Margarine (HS Code 151710) in 2024

For Margarine in 2024, compare import volume and value across the top 10 demand countries to identify priority markets.
RankCountryVolumeValueReport
1United Kingdom96,590,905 kg174,868,470.332 USDView →
2Hungary64,118,655.2 kg93,457,875 USDView →
3Netherlands42,256,493 kg70,767,540.066 USDView →
4Czechia44,328,549.024 kg70,590,119 USDView →
5Spain34,628,288.32 kg61,172,924.031 USDView →
6Italy26,748,199 kg55,636,316.917 USDView →
7United States16,507,751 kg39,940,539 USDView →
8Portugal18,715,007 kg35,573,097.317 USDView →
9Uzbekistan19,960,819.292 kg34,386,378.98 USDView →
10Sweden17,589,049.582 kg33,569,376.389 USDView →

Margarine Import Trade Flow and Origin Country Summary

Analyze Margarine origin-to-destination trade flows by value, volume, and share to monitor demand-side sourcing channels.

Global Wholesale Supplier Price Trends by Country for Margarine

Margarine Monthly Wholesale Supplier Price Summary by Country

Monthly Margarine wholesale unit-price benchmarks by country for export and sourcing decisions.
In 2025-10, countries with visible Margarine wholesale unit prices: Poland (3.42 USD / kg), Ukraine (2.69 USD / kg), Indonesia (0.84 USD / kg).
Country2025-052025-062025-072025-082025-092025-102025-112025-122026-012026-022026-032026-04
Brazil2.43 USD / kg-----
Indonesia0.86 USD / kg0.86 USD / kg0.85 USD / kg0.84 USD / kg0.84 USD / kg0.84 USD / kg
Poland3.37 USD / kg3.29 USD / kg3.22 USD / kg3.30 USD / kg3.43 USD / kg3.42 USD / kg
Ukraine1.63 USD / kg2.30 USD / kg2.93 USD / kg2.86 USD / kg2.72 USD / kg2.69 USD / kg

Margarine Wholesale Price Competitiveness by Major Exporting Countries

Compare Margarine wholesale price ranges and YoY changes across the top 4 exporting countries to benchmark supplier price competitiveness.
RankCountryAverageLowerUpperYoYReport
1Brazil2.23 USD / kg1.80 USD / kg2.58 USD / kg+25.0%View →
2Indonesia0.84 USD / kg0.47 USD / kg1.33 USD / kg+16.0%View →
3Poland3.39 USD / kg2.67 USD / kg4.13 USD / kg+13.8%View →
4Ukraine2.58 USD / kg0.64 USD / kg4.29 USD / kg+1.7%View →

Latest Margarine Wholesale Export Price Updates

Use the latest 5 Margarine wholesale updates to validate current export price points and origin-level supplier changes.
DateEntry NameUnit Price (USD) 
2026-04-01Mar****** * ********** ******0.87 USD / kg
2026-04-01Спр** ** **************** **** * *** ***** * ******* ****4.09 USD / kg
2026-04-01Спр** ********** **** * *** ***** * ******* ****1.81 USD / kg
2026-04-01Спр** ********* ***** * ***** ****** ***** * ******* ****3.41 USD / kg
2026-04-01Спр** **** ************* *** * ***** * ******* ****0.59 USD / kg

Classification

Product TypeProcessed Food
Product FormPackaged
Industry PositionValue-Added Edible Fat Spread

Market

Margarine is a globally traded fat spread and industrial bakery input typically made from blended vegetable oils/fats and formulated for spreadability, plasticity, and oxidative stability. Cross-border trade is commonly captured under HS 1517 and reflects both consumer packs and bulk edible fat preparations used by food manufacturers. Recent market dynamics are shaped by reformulation away from industrially produced trans fats, shifts toward interesterified/fractionated and high-oleic oil blends, and growing sustainability and traceability expectations for palm- and soy-derived inputs. Trade and manufacturing footprints often align with access to competitively priced vegetable-oil feedstocks and large food-processing clusters, alongside substantial intra-regional flows (notably within Europe).
Market GrowthMixed (medium-term outlook)mature-market stability with pockets of growth in plant-based spreads and industrial bakery applications, alongside substitution effects versus butter
Major Producing Countries
  • IndonesiaSignificant export-oriented production of HS 1517 products linked to large palm oil refining and downstream edible-fat processing capacity.
  • BelgiumMajor European manufacturing and re-export hub for fat spreads and edible-fat preparations within EU supply chains.
  • NetherlandsMajor European hub with substantial food-processing and distribution infrastructure supporting exports of HS 1517 products.
  • MalaysiaExport-oriented downstream processing aligned with palm-based edible-fat value chains.
  • GermanyLarge food manufacturing base and notable exporter/importer within European trade flows for HS 1517 products.
Major Exporting Countries
  • IndonesiaAmong the largest exporters by reported trade value for HS 1517 in recent UN Comtrade-derived summaries.
  • BelgiumAmong the largest exporters; strong intra-EU and nearby market distribution for spreads and edible-fat preparations.
  • NetherlandsAmong the largest exporters; distribution gateway role and food-processing cluster support re-exports.
  • MalaysiaNotable exporter of HS 1517 products, reflecting integration with palm-oil-based downstream processing.
  • GermanyNotable exporter within European processed-food trade lanes.
Major Importing Countries
  • ChinaAmong the largest importers by reported trade value for HS 1517 in recent UN Comtrade-derived summaries.
  • FranceMajor importer within European market demand and intra-EU trade flows.
  • GermanyMajor importer and exporter; reflects both domestic demand and intra-regional processing/distribution.
  • NetherlandsSignificant imports consistent with hub-and-spoke distribution and processing roles in Europe.
  • United StatesLarge import market for HS 1517 products, alongside domestic production and food manufacturing demand.
Supply Calendar
  • Indonesia & Malaysia (palm-oil-based feedstocks):Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, DecOil palm is a perennial crop producing fruit throughout the year; upstream palm-derived inputs can supply margarine manufacturing year-round.
  • United States (soybean oil feedstock):Sep, OctU.S. soybeans are commonly harvested in late September and October, influencing seasonal availability and pricing of soybean-derived inputs.
  • Canada (canola/rapeseed oil feedstock):Aug, Sep, OctCanola harvest typically begins in late August and progresses through September into October, affecting seasonal oilseed supply into crushing/refining.
  • Brazil (soybean oil feedstock):Feb, MarIn major producing areas (e.g., southern Brazil), soybean harvest commonly runs from mid-February into March, shaping seasonal export availability for soy complex products.

Specification

Major VarietiesTable margarine (block or tub), Bakery/pastry margarine (lamination grades), Industrial fat spreads, Reduced-fat spreads (fat spreads), Blended spreads (vegetable fat with dairy fat)
Physical Attributes
  • Water-in-oil emulsion designed to be plastic and spreadable at ambient temperature (buyer specs often reference spreadability around 20°C)
  • Texture and plasticity depend on fat-crystal structure and solid fat content profile
  • Color is often standardized (e.g., yellow tint) to match consumer expectations
Compositional Metrics
  • Fat content categories for spreads are commonly defined in international standards (e.g., margarine and reduced-fat variants under Codex fat spreads standard)
  • Trans fat content is a critical compliance parameter in many markets due to limits/bans on partially hydrogenated oils and industrial trans fats
  • Oxidative stability specifications (peroxide value/rancidity indicators) and salt content are common buyer controls depending on segment
Grades
  • Codex fat spreads categories (e.g., margarine and reduced-fat margarine variants) used as a reference framework in international discussions and specifications
  • Industrial grades often specified by functionality (lamination performance, creaming ability, melting profile) rather than a universal grading scale
Packaging
  • Consumer packs: plastic tubs with lidding film; foil-wrapped blocks or sticks
  • Industrial packs: cartons/boxes with lined inner bags; bulk blocks for bakeries and food manufacturers
  • Light- and oxygen-protective packaging is used to manage oxidation and off-flavors
ProcessingFormulation relies on blending, emulsification, and controlled cooling/crystallization to achieve target texture and stabilityInteresterification and/or fractionation of oils/fats may be used to meet melting behavior and trans fat compliance goals, depending on market and formulation strategyEmulsion stability and crystal polymorphism control are key to preventing oiling-off and graininess during storage

Supply Chain

Value Chain
  • Vegetable oil refining/fractionation (as needed) -> fat blend preparation -> aqueous phase preparation (water/salt/acidulants) -> emulsification -> rapid cooling/crystallization -> working/texturizing -> packaging -> distribution (retail and/or industrial)
Demand Drivers
  • Industrial bakery and pastry demand for functional fats (lamination, aeration, texture)
  • Household cooking and table-spread use where price and functionality compete with butter and other spreads
  • Plant-based positioning in markets seeking non-dairy alternatives
  • Reformulation cycles driven by trans fat elimination policies and labeling expectations
Temperature
  • Temperature stability is important to preserve crystal structure and texture; avoid repeated warming/cooling that can cause graininess or oil separation
  • Distribution conditions vary by formulation and market practice (some products are retailed refrigerated; others are stable at cool ambient conditions)
Atmosphere Control
  • Oxygen exposure management (headspace control and packaging barriers) supports oxidative stability, especially for polyunsaturated-oil-rich formulations
Shelf Life
  • Shelf life is generally medium and is primarily limited by oxidation and flavor stability; light, heat, and oxygen exposure accelerate quality loss
  • After opening, quality depends on hygienic handling and minimizing exposure to heat and air

Risks

Feedstock Price Volatility HighMargarine cost and availability are highly exposed to shocks in global vegetable-oil markets (palm, soybean, rapeseed/canola, sunflower). Climate variability, export policy actions, and geopolitical disruption in major oilseed and edible-oil origins can rapidly change input costs and constrain supply, forcing reformulation or margin compression across consumer and industrial segments.Diversify approved oil feedstocks and origins; qualify multiple formulations; use risk-managed procurement (hedging where feasible) and maintain contingency stocks for critical emulsifiers and specialty fats.
Deforestation And Traceability Compliance HighRegulatory and buyer due diligence requirements targeting deforestation-linked commodities (notably palm oil and soy and their derived products) can disrupt access to markets if traceability, legality, and geolocation-linked documentation are insufficient. Compliance burdens can be material for complex multi-tier supply chains and may change sourcing economics.Implement end-to-end traceability for palm/soy-derived inputs; prioritize certified and documented supply (e.g., RSPO for palm); strengthen supplier contracts, audits, and data governance.
Trans Fat Regulatory Compliance MediumGlobal efforts to eliminate industrially produced trans fats drive tighter limits or bans on partially hydrogenated oils, requiring ongoing reformulation and verification. Non-compliance can trigger recalls, import refusals, and brand damage in both retail and industrial channels.Maintain trans fat testing programs and supplier guarantees; use alternative structuring technologies (e.g., interesterification/fractionation and high-oleic oils) aligned with local regulations.
Food Safety MediumQuality failures driven by oxidation, off-flavors, or contamination (e.g., allergens from soy lecithin or dairy-containing blended spreads) can lead to complaints or recalls. Consistent sanitation, allergen control, and ingredient traceability are critical in high-throughput fat-processing environments.Apply HACCP-based controls, allergen segregation, oxidation management (antioxidants and barrier packaging), and robust supplier qualification for oils and additives.
Energy And Logistics MediumProcessing and distribution depend on stable energy for heating/cooling and on packaging supply. Energy price spikes, logistics disruption, or packaging shortages can raise costs or reduce service levels, especially for temperature-sensitive products and industrial customers with tight production schedules.Improve energy efficiency and redundancy in cooling systems; dual-source critical packaging; build regional co-manufacturing options for key markets.
Sustainability
  • Palm-oil-linked deforestation and forest degradation risk in upstream supply chains and the associated need for traceability and certification
  • Land-use change and greenhouse gas emissions concerns (including peatland conversion risks in some producing areas)
  • Packaging waste management for consumer tubs and wrappers; increasing pressure for recyclable designs and reduced plastic
Labor & Social
  • Heightened scrutiny of labor conditions in some upstream vegetable-oil supply chains (notably palm oil), including allegations of forced labor and recruitment-fee risks in parts of the sector
  • Smallholder inclusion and livelihoods in certified and traceable palm and soy supply chains
  • Worker safety in food manufacturing (hot-oil handling, steam/thermal processes, and sanitation chemicals)

FAQ

Why is margarine trade closely linked to vegetable oil markets?Margarine is formulated mainly from blended vegetable oils and fats, so shocks in palm, soybean, canola/rapeseed, or sunflower oil supply and pricing can quickly change manufacturing costs and sourcing options. This record highlights feedstock price volatility as the top global risk because it can force reformulation, reduce availability, or compress margins across retail and industrial segments.
How do trans fat rules affect margarine formulations globally?WHO’s REPLACE initiative and many national policies target the elimination of industrially produced trans fats and the use of partially hydrogenated oils. As a result, margarine producers often rely on alternative fat-structuring approaches (such as blending, fractionation, and interesterification) and maintain testing and supplier controls to stay compliant.
Why is palm oil a sustainability concern for margarine supply chains?Palm oil and palm-derived fractions are common inputs for many fat spreads because they help deliver texture and stability, but palm supply chains are associated with deforestation and land-use change risks in some producing regions. This is why sustainability and traceability requirements (including regulations like the EU’s deforestation-free products rules) are highlighted as a major trade and compliance risk.

Margarine Country Coverage for Suppliers, Export Flows, and Prices

Explore country-level Margarine market pages for supplier coverage, trade flows, and price benchmarks.
All country market pages: China, Indonesia, Belgium, France, India, Germany, Netherlands, United States, Brazil, Poland, Malaysia, Spain, Peru, Denmark, Russia, Uganda, Ireland, Italy, Singapore, Ecuador, Tunisia, Canada, Kenya, Turkiye, Australia, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Azerbaijan, United Kingdom, Ukraine, Nicaragua, Senegal, South Korea, Uruguay, Costa Rica, Japan, Moldova, Chile, Switzerland, Romania, New Zealand, Serbia, Zambia, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Jordan, Argentina, Bulgaria, Sweden, Nigeria, Iraq, Kyrgyzstan, Portugal, Armenia, Austria, Syria, South Africa, Hungary, United Arab Emirates, Czechia, Greece, Honduras, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Georgia, Oman, Turkmenistan, Venezuela, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Philippines, Finland, Slovakia, Thailand, Lithuania, El Salvador, Ghana, Lebanon, Norway, Mongolia, Bhutan, Morocco, Libya, Andorra, Albania, Aruba, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Barbados, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Bahrain, Burundi, Benin, Bermuda, Brunei, Bolivia, Bahamas, Botswana, Belize, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, Cuba, Curacao, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, Estonia, Ethiopia, Fiji, Micronesia, Gabon, Gambia, Hong Kong, Croatia, Haiti, Israel, Iran, Iceland, Jamaica, Cambodia, Kuwait, Laos, Liechtenstein, Sri Lanka, Liberia, Lesotho, Luxembourg, Latvia, Montenegro, Madagascar, Macedonia, Mali, Myanmar [Burma], Macao, Northern Mariana Islands, Mauritania, Malta, Mauritius, Maldives, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, Pakistan, Puerto Rico, Paraguay, Qatar, Rwanda, Slovenia, Suriname, Swaziland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Taiwan, Tanzania, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, Zimbabwe
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.