Brazil's chromite ore imports are nearly entirely from South Africa, with HHI 0.990 and only three suppliers active in Jan-Apr 2026 on a $6.3M base.
Brazil imported $6.3 million in chromite ore and concentrates (HS 2610) in the January–April 2026 period, with 99.5% flowing from a single origin: South Africa. Three countries registered positive flows, but the combined share of the remaining two barely crosses half a percentage point. The resulting HHI of 0.990 is a near-perfect monopoly score.
Chromite is a strategic mineral. Its primary end-use is stainless steel production — chromium is the element that provides corrosion resistance in the alloy. It also enters tool-grade steel, heat-resistant coatings, and chemical intermediates. Brazil's demand for chromite is driven by its specialty steel and chemical sectors. The country holds no significant domestic chromite deposits in commercial production, making import dependence structurally unavoidable rather than a policy choice.
South Africa's dominance here is not incidental. The country controls approximately 72% of the world's chromite reserves and is the largest global producer, ahead of Kazakhstan and India. South African chromite is high-grade, extraction and export infrastructure is well-developed, and long-term supply contracts with global buyers are the norm. From a comparative advantage standpoint, South Africa is the natural default supplier for any country without domestic reserves and unwilling to pay the premium for alternatives.
The structural vulnerability, however, is meaningful. South Africa has a documented history of energy grid instability (load shedding), mining sector labor disputes, and regional geopolitical pressures that periodically affect port logistics. The country's government has also periodically discussed imposing export duties on raw mineral ore to incentivize domestic beneficiation — a policy that, if implemented, would directly increase the cost basis for Brazilian importers currently paying only FOB prices.
The $6.3M quadrimester figure is modest in absolute terms, but the criticality of the input is not measured by its dollar value. Industries using chromite — specialty steel mills, chemical producers — do not have near-term substitutes for the mineral. A 90-day supply disruption can cascade into production delays for specialty steel products with long lead times and downstream delivery commitments that cannot simply be pushed.
The nominal presence of three suppliers rather than two offers slightly more formal diversification than the wooden sleeper case, but with the second and third suppliers combined representing less than 0.5% of flow, the operational reality is single-source dependency. Any real contingency strategy requires an active supplier qualification program — Kazakhstan and India are the logical candidates — with pilot contracts executed before a crisis materializes, not after.
From a global commodity perspective: chromite prices are USD-denominated but South African production costs are rand-denominated. When the rand weakens, South African competitiveness increases and Brazilian buyers benefit; when the rand strengthens, margin pressure at the producer level can translate into contract price renegotiation. The Brazilian importer thus carries both BRL/USD and implicit ZAR/USD exposure through their supply chain.
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