0 export partner countries and 0 import partner countries are ranked.
Page data last updated on 2026-06-04.
Raw Walnuts Export Supplier Intelligence, Price Trends, and Trade Flows in Bolivia
0 export partner companies are tracked for Raw Walnuts in Bolivia. Use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to validate exporter coverage, partner quality, and route priorities.
Explore Raw Walnuts export intelligence in Bolivia, including 2 sampled supplier transactions, monthly unit-price ranges, and partner-country trade flow patterns for HS Code 080231.
Scatter points are sampled from 100.0% of the full transaction dataset.
Sample Export Supplier Transaction Records for Raw Walnuts in Bolivia
2 sampled Raw Walnuts transactions in Bolivia include date, origin, and partner-country context to benchmark export prices and supplier trading patterns.
Raw Walnuts sampled transaction unit prices by date in Bolivia: 2026-01-21: 1.27 USD / kg, 2026-01-21: 1.26 USD / kg.
Date
Reported Product
Unit Price
Exporter
Importer
2026-01-21
WAL***** ****** *** *** **** **** *** ****
1.27 USD / kg
(Bolivia)
(Ecuador)
2026-01-21
WAL***** ****** *** *** **** **** *** ****
1.26 USD / kg
(Bolivia)
(Ecuador)
Classification
Product TypeRaw Material
Product FormRaw (in-shell and/or kernels)
Industry PositionPrimary Agricultural Product
Raw Material
Market
Raw walnuts in Bolivia are primarily supplied through imports, with limited visibility of large-scale domestic commercial walnut production in trade-oriented datasets. As a landlocked market, Bolivia’s walnut supply is sensitive to cross-border logistics performance and customs/SPS clearance timelines. Market access and continuity depend on complete SENASAG import documentation and conformity to food-safety expectations for nuts (e.g., mycotoxins and pesticide residues). Importers typically manage quality through supplier approvals and lot-level traceability to origin and packing/processing establishment.
Market RoleImport-dependent consumer market (limited domestic production visibility)
Specification
Physical Attributes
In-shell: sound, intact shells; low insect damage; absence of mold and foreign matter
Kernels: color uniformity, low defect/broken rate, and absence of rancid/off-odors
Compositional Metrics
Moisture control to reduce mold growth and rancidity risk
Packaging
Moisture-barrier packaging for kernels (often vacuum or inert-gas formats) to protect against oxidation
Clean bulk sacks/cartons for in-shell walnuts with clear lot identification for traceability
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Exporter/processor → international freight to neighboring-country entry point → inland transport to Bolivia → customs/SENASAG clearance → importer warehousing → wholesale/retail distribution
Temperature
Cool, dry storage and protection from heat are important to limit oxidation/rancidity in kernels
Shelf life is highly sensitive to moisture pickup, temperature abuse, and prolonged border delays
Freight IntensityMedium
Transport ModeMultimodal
Risks
Regulatory Compliance HighSENASAG clearance and required import documentation (and any applicable phytosanitary pathway) can block entry if documents are missing, inconsistent, or not aligned with the product’s regulatory classification, causing holds, re-export, or destruction.Confirm SENASAG import pathway and document checklist before shipment; run a pre-alert document reconciliation (invoice/packing list/transport docs/origin and any SPS certificates) tied to lot IDs.
Food Safety MediumNuts can face rejection or recall risk if lots fail contaminant expectations (e.g., mycotoxins) or exceed pesticide residue limits, disrupting importer programs and increasing inspection intensity.Use approved suppliers with validated drying/handling controls; require lot-linked COAs where relevant and maintain retention samples for dispute resolution.
Logistics MediumLandlocked routing via neighboring-country ports and inland corridors increases exposure to border delays, strikes, and trucking bottlenecks; extended transit can degrade kernel quality via heat/moisture exposure.Specify moisture-barrier packaging, use clear dry-chain SOPs, and build time buffers around peak congestion periods; consider alternative corridors/entry points to diversify disruption exposure.
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