Brazilian polyethylene exports to Nigeria leapt from a 653-tonne historical average to 8,739 tonnes in 2025 — an unprecedented corridor shift.
Nigeria rarely showed up on the map for Brazilian polyethylene shipments. In 2025, that changed in striking fashion: Brazil exported 8,739 tonnes of ethylene polymers to the West African nation — against a multi-year historical average of roughly 653 tonnes per year. The shift exceeds 1,000 times the corridor's usual baseline.
This is not a small-base correction. The historical average reflected residual flow — spot cargoes or commercial samples. The 2025 volume carries the scale of a structured supply arrangement, and that warrants a clear economic explanation.
Nigeria's petrochemical sector is going through a meaningful transition. The Dangote refinery in Lagos — the largest on the African continent — began partial operations in 2024 and progressively scaled up plastics and downstream processing through the year. Expansion projects in packaging and agricultural inputs require plastic resins in growing volumes. Nigeria has historically relied on imports for those inputs, and the market was open for suppliers who could offer competitive pricing and reliable logistics.
Brazil, in turn, holds meaningful installed capacity in the petrochemical chain through Braskem. When a favorable pricing window opens — a weaker BRL reduces FOB costs in dollar terms for the Nigerian buyer — Brazilian exporters can compete against European and Middle Eastern suppliers on Atlantic trade routes. BACEN data show the real operating at a significant depreciation against the dollar through 2025, broadly improving the price competitiveness of Brazilian chemical exports.
Polyethylene is a direct input for packaging, piping, agricultural films and industrial plastic components. African demand for these products has expanded over the past decade, driven by rapid urbanization and growing processed-food supply chains. Nigeria, with a population exceeding 220 million people, is the continent's largest consumer market — and also its largest regional importer of plastic resins.
Shipments from the Port of Santos have direct access to South Atlantic routes, with competitive freight to Lagos and the port of Apapa. That logistical advantage, combined with a favorable exchange rate, positions Brazil as a viable alternative to traditional European and Middle Eastern suppliers on this commercial route.
The absence of 2026 year-to-date data for this corridor makes it impossible to confirm whether the flow is holding. Volumes of this scale in 2025 could reflect a medium-term supply contract — which would signal genuine commercial penetration — or a concentrated single-buyer shipment with lower recurrence expected in the coming quarters.
The Brazil-Nigeria track record in petrochemicals is thin. If Braskem or an intermediary distributor secured a structured agreement, the flow should repeat and grow. If the operation was spot-driven on a currency window, next year may bring a meaningful pullback. Tracking this corridor through the first months of 2026 is the natural test to confirm which path was followed.
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