Brazil's imports of metal oxides and inorganic bases from Turkey surged more than 8-fold in two years, from US$ 155k to US$ 1.24 million in 2025.
Turkey was barely a blip in Brazil's inorganic chemicals supply map two years ago. Imports of metal oxides, hydroxides and inorganic bases totaled just US$ 155,000 in 2023. By 2025, that figure had crossed US$ 1.24 million — more than 8× higher. Two consecutive years moving in the same direction: a trend, not noise.
The move started fast. In 2024, the import value leaped +351% year-on-year, from US$ 155k to nearly US$ 700k. That alone would be notable. Then 2025 added another +77.7% on top, pushing the two-year compound to roughly 8×. The stabilization in 2025 is the confirming signal: the 2024 surge held, and the corridor moved from novelty to established flow. When a supply corridor grows at that pace over two consecutive cycles, buyers have found something that works.
The product group under MDIC's classification covers hydrazine, hydroxylamine and their inorganic salts, plus a range of metal oxides and peroxides — industrial intermediates consumed by ceramics manufacturing, water treatment, catalysts and precision metallurgy. This is a niche category but a structurally recurring one. A supply disruption here is not merely a cost question: it can halt a production line.
Turkey has expanded production capacity in this chemical segment over the past decade, backed by competitive industrial energy costs and sea-lane access via the Mediterranean connecting to Atlantic ports. For Brazil, historically reliant on Chinese and Western European suppliers for these intermediates, Turkey offers a mid-tier price point: cheaper than most European alternatives, with shorter transit times than some deep-Asian routes.
The pattern is not unique to this product. Turkish suppliers have already carved out share in Brazilian industrial segments including coatings, surface treatment and specialty formulations. What differs here is the speed: the 2024 breakout was sharp, and the 2025 consolidation was equally consistent — two moves that reinforce each other.
It is worth noting that Brazil does not compete in this category as an exporter. This is a pure import flow — inputs entering to feed the domestic industrial chain. That means any FX move, tariff change or supplier disruption hits the Brazilian processor's cost structure directly and immediately. The diversification that Turkey represents reduces that single-source exposure.
With an absolute level above US$ 1.24 million, Turkey is no longer statistical noise from a near-zero start — it is a material supplier in this niche. Global chemical supply chains have been rerouting since the pandemic exposed single-source risk across dozens of intermediates categories. Brazil's opening to Turkish inorganic intermediates fits the broader diversification that procurement teams across heavy industry have been executing. The Brazil-Turkey chemical corridor is still small relative to total Brazilian chemical imports, but the directional signal is clear.
Products in this classification that have water-treatment or food-contact applications face additional Anvisa scrutiny at customs — a detail that matters for operators planning to scale up volumes with Turkish counterparts. Industrial-only grades clear more directly. Mapping that distinction before signing a supply contract avoids downstream delays. You can follow this corridor's evolution on Kyrodata.
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