Brazil: With new agreements, chicken meat exporting countries regain markets lost due to IAAP

Published 2024년 10월 16일

Tridge summary

The Brazilian government is working to renew export agreements to prevent embargoes due to diseases like HPAI and Newcastle Disease, ensuring the flow of chicken meat to foreign markets. However, the success of these efforts in maintaining current markets is not guaranteed as other countries recover from similar issues. The example of the Philippines shows a decrease in imports from Brazil due to increases in imports from other countries, with the European Union increasing its exports by 30,000% in 2024. This recovery indicates that records of these diseases are no longer an insurmountable barrier for the export of animal products, but exporters must put in greater effort to retain markets.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Brazilian government's efforts to renew export agreements that limit embargoes resulting from diseases such as Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) and Newcastle to the focus of the problem are essential to maintaining the flow of chicken meat to the foreign market. However, they do not guarantee the preservation of current markets, since those exporters that also faced the problem are following the same path and are gradually reoccupying the spaces that were temporarily lost. This becomes quite clear when analyzing, for example, the evolution of imports from the Philippines. According to the USDA, Brazil is its main supplier of chicken meat. Last year, between January and July, Brazilian chicken meat supplied to that market accounted for 56% of the total imported by the Philippines in the period. At the time, it was just over 143 thousand tons, a volume that placed the country as Brazil's sixth largest customer in the sector, according to SECEX/MDIC. In 2024, the ...

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