이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 618개와 수입업체 697개가 색인되어 있습니다.
1,818건의 공급업체 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
현재 프리미엄 공급업체 4개와 카탈로그 항목 1개가 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 5건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2026입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-06-17.
건조 카모마일에 대한 글로벌 공급업체 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 1,818건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 건조 카모마일의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
건조 카모마일 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
건조 카모마일의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
건조 카모마일의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 아르헨티나 (-74.4%), 영국 (+74.0%), 남아프리카 (-61.8%)입니다.
건조 카모마일 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-07 기준으로 건조 카모마일 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-12 기준, 노출 가능한 건조 카모마일 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 싱가포르 (107.88 USD / kg), 영국 (97.56 USD / kg), 프랑스 (43.88 USD / kg), 미국 (41.32 USD / kg), 독일 (37.92 USD / kg), 외 13개국입니다.
Scientific NameMatricaria recutita L. (syn. Matricaria chamomilla L.) is the most common medicinal chamomile in trade; Roman chamomile is Chamaemelum nobile L.
Cultivated across temperate and Mediterranean agro-climates; essential-oil quality is influenced by environmental factors such as temperature and sunlight hours
Main VarietiesGerman chamomile (Matricaria recutita L.), Roman chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile L.)
Consumption Forms
Herbal teas/infusions (beverage use)
Dry or liquid extracts used in herbal medicinal products and nutraceuticals
Essential oil and extracts for cosmetics and personal care
Grading Factors
Botanical identity and flower-head purity (avoid confusion/admixture with other Asteraceae)
Foreign matter control (soil, stones, debris) and stem/leaf content minimization
Moisture control to prevent mould and microbial growth during storage and transport
Chemical compliance testing (pyrrolizidine alkaloids in herbal infusions; pesticide residues as required by destination market)
Microbiological quality and, where required, validated microbial reduction treatments
Market
Dried chamomile (typically dried flower heads for herbal infusions and extracts) is traded globally as part of the medicinal-and-aromatic-plants supply base and is sensitive to quality and contaminant compliance in destination markets. Cultivation is reported in multiple temperate and Mediterranean zones, with production often cited in countries including Argentina, Egypt, France, Germany, Hungary and Poland, supplying tea blenders and botanical ingredient users. Egypt is frequently referenced as a significant supplier of chamomile and other MAPs into European natural-ingredient value chains, where buyers emphasize pesticide and contaminant controls. A key market dynamic is regulatory-driven testing and segregation (food-grade infusion vs pharmacopoeial/medicinal uses), including heightened scrutiny of pyrrolizidine alkaloid (PA) contamination in herbal infusions.
Major Producing Countries
아르헨티나Frequently cited in agronomy and medicinal-plant literature as a major chamomile-producing country; production supports dried flower and essential-oil value chains.
이집트Frequently cited as a major producing country and a significant supplier of chamomile within broader medicinal and aromatic plants (MAPs) trade into Europe.
프랑스Reported among countries where chamomile is produced/cultivated for medicinal and aromatic uses.
독일Reported among countries where chamomile is produced/cultivated for medicinal and aromatic uses.
헝가리Reported among countries where chamomile is produced/cultivated; associated with long-standing chamomile cultivation and quality differentiation in some supply chains.
폴란드Cited in medicinal-plant literature as one of the larger producers of chamomile raw material.
Major Exporting Countries
이집트CBI market-entry guidance for European natural-ingredient sectors identifies Egypt as a significant supplier of MAPs including chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla L.).
Specification
Major VarietiesGerman chamomile (Matricaria recutita L.; syn. Matricaria chamomilla L.), Roman chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile L.)
Physical Attributes
Dried flower heads/flowers with yellow disc florets; lots may be traded as whole flowers or as cut-and-sifted (comminuted) material for blending
Aroma and appearance are key buyer cues; excessive stems/leaves and foreign matter are common defects flagged in quality programs
Compositional Metrics
Essential-oil profile/markers (e.g., α-bisabolol-related constituents, chamazulene in the oil) are commonly used in differentiation for extract and cosmetic/pharma uses
Contaminant metrics are often decisive for market access (e.g., pyrrolizidine alkaloids in herbal infusions; pesticide residues; heavy metals where relevant)
Grades
Food-grade dried chamomile for herbal infusions (tea blending)
Herbal medicinal / pharmacopoeial-oriented raw material (Matricariae flos) for traditional herbal medicinal product preparations
Cut size presentation grades (whole flower, cut-and-sifted, teabag cut) used in trade specifications
Packaging
Moisture-protective bulk packaging (e.g., lined bags or cartons) with emphasis on keeping product dry and protected from re-wetting and pests throughout storage and transport
ProcessingPost-harvest drying (natural or mechanical) and subsequent cleaning/sorting; microbial reduction treatments (e.g., steam treatment or irradiation) may be applied where buyers require microbiological risk reduction
Herbal infusion (caffeine-free chamomile tea) demand from retail and foodservice tea/blending sectors
Botanical extracts used in traditional herbal medicinal products and OTC wellness categories
Cosmetics and personal care formulations using chamomile-derived ingredients (including essential oil and extracts)
Temperature
Ambient shipment is common for dried chamomile, but storage must be cool and dry with strict moisture control to prevent mould and quality degradation
Shelf Life
Dried herbal infusions are typically treated as long-shelf-life commodities; EU contaminant regulation for pyrrolizidine alkaloids references shelf-life of affected products as up to three years, reinforcing the need for stable, dry storage and traceability over extended holding periods
Risks
Chemical Contaminants HighPyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) are a deal-breaker compliance risk for chamomile used in herbal infusions because contamination from PA-producing weeds can occur during harvesting and handling. The EU has set maximum levels for PAs in herbal infusions including chamomile (dried product), with the limits applying from 1 July 2022; non-compliance can trigger border rejections, recalls, and rapid buyer delisting.Implement and audit GACP weed control and harvesting segregation, require PA testing on representative lots, and maintain supplier-level traceability to field/collection area and harvest window.
Microbial Contamination MediumDried aromatic herbs can carry Salmonella and other pathogens, with contamination possible across a long, multi-stage supply chain (harvest, drying platforms, consolidation, processing, and repacking). Microbiological failures can lead to recalls and destroyed inventory, especially where product is intended for direct infusion/consumption.Apply Codex-aligned hygienic drying and storage controls, validate microbial reduction treatments where required, and use environmental monitoring plus finished-product testing for high-risk destinations.
Regulatory Compliance MediumPesticide-residue non-compliance is a recurring buyer concern in some MAP supply chains (including Egyptian origins highlighted in EU-oriented market guidance), and can restrict access to stringent markets and organic channels.Use approved plant-protection programs, enforce pre-harvest intervals, expand multi-residue testing, and require documented water and input controls from grower groups.
Product Authenticity MediumBotanical identity and adulteration/misidentification risk (e.g., confusion with other Asteraceae, including Anthemis species) can undermine medicinal/organoleptic performance and introduce safety or regulatory non-compliance issues for labeled products.Require authenticated botanical identification (macroscopy/microscopy plus chemical fingerprinting where appropriate) and enforce supplier specifications for flower-head purity and maximum stem/leaf content.
Sustainability
Pesticide-residue management and water-quality stewardship in key producing regions (notably flagged for Egyptian MAP supply chains in European market-entry guidance)
Post-harvest drying and storage practices to prevent mould growth and mycotoxin risk under humid conditions (moisture control is central to dried-herb safety and waste reduction)
Labor & Social
Smallholder and small-scale farmer participation is common in medicinal-and-aromatic-plant supply chains (e.g., Egypt), creating traceability and consistent quality-management challenges that can translate into compliance and income volatility risks
FAQ
Which plant material does “dried chamomile” usually refer to in international trade?In many regulated and commercial contexts, dried chamomile refers to the dried flower heads of German chamomile (Matricaria recutita L.), often traded as whole flowers or as comminuted (cut-and-sifted) material for herbal teas and extracts.
Why are pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) a major trade risk for chamomile?PAs are toxins that can contaminate chamomile when PA-producing weeds are co-harvested or mixed into lots. The EU has maximum levels for PAs in herbal infusions including chamomile (dried product), and non-compliant shipments can be rejected or recalled, making PA control and testing a central buyer requirement.
What are common quality problems buyers try to avoid in dried chamomile lots?Buyers commonly screen for excess stems and non-flower plant parts, foreign matter (like soil and debris), and moisture-related issues that can drive mould growth and microbial risk. These defects directly affect infusion quality, safety compliance, and the ability to meet destination-market specifications.