Brazilian frozen poultry shipments to Sierra Leone reached 24,017 tonnes in 2025, five times the multi-year historical average of 5,497 tonnes — a
Brazil closed 2025 with a poultry export figure to Sierra Leone that few would have anticipated: 24,017 tonnes, against a multi-year historical average of 5,497 tonnes. The 5-fold increase converts a corridor once treated as marginal into one of the more consequential moves in the African protein market. Sierra Leone is nowhere near Brazil's top poultry buyers — Saudi Arabia, Japan, and China have occupied those positions for years. But the 2025 spike places it firmly on the radar of exporters tracking sub-Saharan demand. The African continent as a whole has grown steadily as a destination for Brazilian frozen protein, and this corridor may represent the next phase of that expansion.
Three angles frame the movement. First, new importer entry: West African distributors increasingly structure annual supply contracts when cold-chain infrastructure reaches a certain threshold. The first year of a regular contract often shows up in trade data as an apparent spike — and that pattern is precisely what the 2025 numbers reflect.
Second, cold-chain expansion. Sierra Leone has received infrastructure investment in port refrigeration and food storage, partly financed by multilateral development funds. When storage capacity grows, demand for frozen protein tends to jump in a single cohort, because distributors can absorb larger lots without spoilage risk.
Third, supplier substitution. European and Asian exporters that historically supplied West Africa with frozen poultry have faced sanitary and logistical headwinds since 2022. Brazil, with MAPA-certified product and competitive freight routing via the Lomé hub, is a natural replacement. For the local importer, switching supplier makes commercial sense when the logistics math works out.
Brazil is the world's largest poultry exporter — annual shipments exceed 4 million tonnes. Sub-Saharan Africa has grown steadily as a destination over the past three years: Ghana, South Africa, and Mozambique already rank among Brazilian poultry's top African markets.
The structural driver is clear: growing demand for affordable protein across the continent, combined with Brazil's cost-competitive production and a BRL/USD exchange rate that stayed above 5.70 for most of 2025. That exchange rate differential made Brazilian frozen poultry materially cheaper than competing product priced in euros or pounds — an advantage that typically converts into larger-volume contracts signed in the second half of the year.
SH4 0207 covers fresh, chilled, and frozen poultry cuts. African shipments are overwhelmingly frozen, which simplifies logistics and extends the commercial window at destination. Brazilian exporters have run Africa market-development programs for at least five years, and the 2025 data suggests those investments are finally converting into volume.
Analyzing the historical corridor, pre-2025 Sierra Leone purchases were sporadic and small-scale. The 2025 figure is different: 24,017 tonnes requires structured transport, storage, and distribution capacity. This is not an emergency purchase — it is a planned contract.
The most important data point to watch in the coming months is whether the corridor holds above 10,000 tonnes in 2026. Sustained volumes at that level would confirm a market opening rather than a one-time event.
Primary source: MDIC ComexStat.
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