Brazil closed 2025 with 4,171 tons of raw peanuts shipped to Egypt, nearly ten times above the corridor's multi-year historical average of 436 tons.
Brazil shipped 4,171 tons of raw peanuts to Egypt in the full-year 2025 closing — a volume that sits nearly ten times above the corridor's long-run average, according to MDIC ComexStat data. Egypt, the Arab world's largest peanut consumer, had barely registered as a meaningful destination for Brazilian product before this.
The historical average for this trade lane hovered around 436 tons a year. Nothing in the prior series hinted at a breakout. The 2025 print changed that picture — and it is large enough to be treated as a corridor opening rather than a one-off cargo.
Egypt runs a sizable peanut processing industry — edible oil, paste, and packaged snacks — supplied by imports from Argentina, the United States, and China. A slot opening for Brazil likely reflects supply constraints from one or more of those usual origins, combined with a pricing advantage that Brazilian shippers were positioned to exploit.
The BRL/USD exchange rate was a supporting factor through most of 2025. A weaker real makes Brazilian FOB prices more attractive to dollar-paying importers, narrowing the gap with Argentine or US product even when international benchmark prices hold steady. In periods of dollar strength, Brazil has historically gained ground in corridors that other South American origins once dominated.
Brazil's 2024/25 peanut harvest also exceeded its historical pace, particularly in São Paulo and Goiás states. Surplus domestic supply, competitive export pricing, and favorable exchange rates together are the textbook setup for a new corridor opening in oilseeds.
Egypt imported close to 100,000 tons of peanuts in 2024, the bulk from Argentina and the US, based on global trade data. Brazil's 4,171-ton volume, even after the jump, remains a small share of that total — but a commercial footprint now exists where it did not before.
Egyptian demand for peanuts has grown alongside rising packaged-snack consumption in urban centers. Regional re-export potential matters too: Cairo serves as a logistics hub for North African and Eastern Mediterranean supply chains. An Egyptian importer who tested Brazilian product in 2025 carries that option into the next buying cycle.
Brazil is the world's second-largest peanut producer after China. Domestic consumption absorbs most output, and exports have historically concentrated in European buyers and parts of the Middle East. The raw peanut export series reflects that pattern — Africa has been a growth frontier only since 2022, initially in animal proteins, now reaching into oilseeds.
A sustained relationship with Egypt would diversify Brazil's peanut export base. Whether 2025 was a one-time cargo spike or the start of a durable route will depend on whether Egyptian importers return in 2026. MDIC ComexStat data in the first half of next year will answer that question.
For now, the corridor is open. Whether it stays open is a question of whether Brazilian peanut exporters have the logistics, the credit lines, and the market relationships to follow through. The 2026 MDIC ComexStat data in the first semester will be the verdict on whether this was a lasting shift.
For exporters: treat Egypt as an active prospect for the 2025/26 crop cycle rather than a speculative destination; document the 2025 shipment history to support commercial credit applications and export finance lines.
For importers: the volume is still modest in global terms; companies supplying peanut processing inputs into Egypt should monitor whether Brazilian origin consolidates or fades if Argentine supply normalizes.
Primary source: MDIC ComexStat.
Peanut traders mapping Brazil's export corridors five years ago would not have put Egypt on the shortlist — the 2025 data just moved it there.
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