Brazil imported 66,819 tons of ethyl alcohol from Argentina in 2025, 14 times the multi-year historical average of 4,473 tons in a single closed year.
Brazil imported 66,819 tons of ethyl alcohol from Argentina in 2025 — 14× the multi-year historical average of roughly 4,473 tons. It is the largest single-year volume on record for this corridor, and the gap to prior norms is substantial.
Ethyl alcohol — used in fuels, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and beverages — is produced in Brazil at large scale, predominantly from sugarcane. That Brazil sought additional volume from Argentina at this magnitude points to domestic supply gaps and pricing dynamics that are worth unpacking.
The first plausible explanation is a seasonal domestic supply shortfall. Brazil's sugarcane crush runs an off-season window from roughly November through March. During lower-crush periods, cane ethanol availability falls and domestic prices rise. Argentina produces alcohol primarily from grains — corn and sorghum — with a distinct seasonal calendar. That mismatch can open arbitrage windows for Brazil to buy at competitive prices.
The second driver is price. The Argentine peso's sustained devaluation through 2024 broadly cheapened Argentine exports. Even with overland freight and Mercosur tariffs factored in, Argentine alcohol may have landed in southern Brazil at prices competitive with domestic product or alcohol from more distant suppliers such as the United States or Europe.
The third is logistics. The proximity between Paraná state and Argentine alcohol-producing provinces in the northwest — Tucumán and Jujuy — keeps freight costs lower than for more distant origins. Trucking companies in southern Brazil run this corridor with enough frequency to provide operational agility.
Brazil is the world's second-largest ethanol producer, behind the United States. The domestic blending mandate — currently set at 27% ethanol in gasoline — keeps baseline demand high. In years when the Center-South harvest underperforms, or fuel demand runs ahead of projections, spot imports act as a supply buffer. That mechanism is not new.
What stands out about 2025 is the absolute volume. Adjustment purchases from Argentina rarely exceeded 5,000 to 8,000 tons in prior years. Reaching nearly 67,000 tons implies more structured supply contracts, likely involving regional distributors in southern Brazil alongside industrial buyers in the chemical and pharmaceutical sectors. Contracts at this scale require forward planning on both sides — logistics, currency hedging, and regulatory compliance with Mercosur origin rules. That is not the profile of opportunistic spot buying; it suggests a deliberate supply strategy by Brazilian importers.
Relying on Argentina to cover Brazilian alcohol supply gaps is not without risk. Argentina carries above-average regulatory and currency volatility. A stronger peso or government-imposed export restrictions during domestic shortfall episodes can disrupt the flow with little warning. The corridor works well in normal years. Under simultaneous stress in both countries, it becomes fragile — and no immediate structured alternative exists to absorb that volume quickly. Brazilian buyers would face the choice of paying domestic spot prices during an off-season crunch or finding alternative suppliers in the United States or Europe at longer lead times and higher freight costs. Neither option is comfortable at 67,000-ton scale.
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