Brazil shipped 8,739 tons of ethylene polymers to Nigeria in 2025 — over 13 times the historical average — opening a new African petrochemical corridor.
Brazil exported 8,739 tons of ethylene polymers to Nigeria in 2025. The historical average for this trade corridor was around 653 tons per year. The jump is more than 13 times that multi-year baseline. Ethylene polymers — polyethylene in its various densities, from HDPE to LDPE — are foundational industrial inputs. They go into packaging, pipes, plastic films, bags, and automotive components. A move of this scale toward a Sub-Saharan African destination is not routine for Brazil's petrochemical sector and warrants a close look at the drivers.
Nigeria is Sub-Saharan Africa's largest economy, with more than 220 million people and a manufacturing sector that depends heavily on imported plastic inputs. The country is a major crude oil producer, but its domestic petrochemical capacity cannot convert that resource into processed polyethylene at the scale required for internal consumption.
That gap has created a significant import market, historically supplied by Asian, European, and Middle Eastern providers. A credible reading for 2025: Brazil partially displaced those suppliers in this corridor, leveraging a competitive exchange rate and Atlantic logistics.
Braskem, the largest thermoplastic producer in the Americas, holds significant installed capacity in high- and low-density polyethylene, with plants in São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul, and Bahia. When the real weakens, the dollar cost of production falls and the export window opens toward emerging markets that were previously served by closer suppliers.
The global polyethylene market entered a surplus cycle after 2023, driven by major capacity expansions in the United States, fueled by shale gas feedstock, and in the Middle East. Lower global prices give the Nigerian buyer more options.
When the price per ton falls, the volume needed to meet a given demand level increases proportionally. That effect may have inflated the 2025 tonnage figure without necessarily indicating a definitive structural shift in sourcing. Part of the jump reflects real volume growth; part may reflect temporary supplier substitution driven by price arbitrage.
Brazil, as a producer of both conventional and green polyethylene through Braskem, the Americas leader in bio-based plastic from sugarcane ethanol, has a resilient supplier profile for low-price global cycles. When the world market is oversupplied, buyers seek the lowest delivered cost. The weak real delivered exactly that margin in 2025.
In 2025, the real remained weak against the dollar through most of the year, broadly favoring Brazilian exporters. For the petrochemical sector, the currency differential is direct: operating costs denominated in reais translate into a pricing advantage when quoting in dollars.
Nigeria also operated with a naira that depreciated significantly against the dollar from 2023 onward, raising the general cost of imports. In that context, suppliers able to offer lower dollar-denominated prices, as Brazil could in 2025, gain preference in competitive procurement processes. The exchange rate dynamics on both sides of the trade favored this corridor.
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