Kyrodata
PanelNewsPricing
KyrodataAuditable on every query. No black box.
AboutNewsEditorialPrivacyTermsRefundSupport
© 2026 Kyrodata. All rights reserved.
  1. Exports

Brazilian sulfates: Netherlands claims top spot with a +662% FOB surge

Netherlands climbed from 9th to #1 in Brazilian sulfate exports: FOB jumped from US$1.5M to US$11.1M and market share from 3.5% to 19.3% in 2026.

By··4 min
Save
Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter
Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter

Summary

  • •Netherlands climbed from 9th to 1st in Brazilian sulfate export rankings
  • •FOB grew +662%: from US$1.5M to US$11.1M in the Jan–Apr 2026 period
  • •Dutch market share jumped from 3.5% to 19.3% — above acceptable concentration levels
  • •Netherlands as a hub provides indirect pan-European reach: the real asset beyond the headline number
  • •Single-buyer concentration requires immediate contractual protection

From supporting act to lead

The Netherlands ranked 9th among destinations for Brazilian exports of sulfates, alums, and persulfates (SH4 2833) in the January–April 2025 period, with US$1,455,303 and a 3.5% share of total flows. In the same window of 2026, that ranking became #1: US$11,087,600 and a 19.3% market share.

FOB change was +662% — not the kind of swing explained by seasonal variation or a single spot contract.

What sulfates are and why the Netherlands buys them

SH4 2833 covers a heterogeneous set of inorganic compounds: sodium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, copper sulfate, potassium alum, ammonium persulfate, among others. These are broadly-used industrial inputs — textiles, pulp and paper, water treatment, agrochemicals, electronics, cosmetics.

Read more

  • Brazilian pepper exports to Colombia surge roughly 7-fold

    Brazilian pepper exports to Colombia surge roughly 7-fold

  • Brazil's refined oil exports to Poland jump 7x

    Brazil's refined oil exports to Poland jump 7x

  • Turkish metal oxides surge 8x in Brazil's inorganic imports

The Netherlands is, historically, a chemical distribution hub for Europe. Rotterdam receives, processes, and redistributes. A +662% surge in purchases from Brazil does not necessarily mean Dutch industry started consuming more — it may mean the Dutch distributor shifted sourcing preference toward Brazil at the expense of another supplier.

The competitive race in SH4 2833

The central dynamic here is substitution: if the Netherlands reached #1 by climbing 8 positions in a single annual cycle, someone else dropped. The country's 19.3% share came from somewhere, redistributed away from other partners. This pattern — growing concentration in the lead buyer, dilution across the rest — is textbook when a hub distributor consolidates sourcing.

For the Brazilian sulfate exporter, this is both good and bad. Good because total volume grows, average price per tonne tends to stabilize under longer-term contracts, and the Netherlands as hub provides indirect reach across all of Europe. Bad because concentrating 19.3% of volume in a single buyer creates exposure: if that distributor switches suppliers, the impact is immediate and broad.

What's driving the shift

Several hypotheses fit the data: (a) price competitiveness — the BRL/USD rate at export-friendly levels makes Brazilian sulfates cheaper than European or Asian alternatives at CIF freight tip; (b) supply availability — Europe faced basic chemical supply constraints since the 2022 energy shock, and distributors widened their sourcing base; (c) quality and certification — Brazilian chemical exporters have advanced on ISO certification and technical documentation required by EU REACH regulation.

No single driver explains it all — likely a combination of the three, with (a) pulling the trigger and (b) opening the door.

What this means for you
For exporters
  • With 19.3% of total volume concentrated in a single hub distributor, negotiate minimum volume commitments and exclusivity terms in upcoming Dutch contracts — concentration without contractual protection is a portfolio risk.
  • Map the Dutch distributor's end customers in Europe: direct access to two or three of them reduces dependency and opens a proprietary channel for 2027.
For importers
  • Buyers sourcing sulfates from alternative origins (China, Morocco, Eastern Europe) should monitor whether Brazil's repositioning is shifting the international price reference — a +662% move at a redistribution hub typically pressures regional benchmarks.

This analysis is written by the Kyrodata Editorial Team from official data. See our methodology →

Get analyses like this in your inbox →

Share this article

微QQ

Sources

  • ·MDIC ComexStat — capítulo 2833 (2025)
  • ·Kyrodata — dashboard interativo SH4 2833 (2025)

Topics

ExportsPaíses Baixos (Holanda)ChemicalsMarket Share
Home
News
Kyrodata Editorial Desk

Turkish metal oxides surge 8x in Brazil's inorganic imports

  • Domestic Brazilian users of copper sulfate or ammonium persulfate in textile or electronics should watch whether export volume diversion tightens domestic supply in the second half of 2026.
  • Most popular

    1. 1

      U.S. wooden sleeper near-monopoly: Brazil's railway blind spot

      Concentration Risk

    2. 2

      Singapore vaults to #1 in Brazil's valve exports through April

      Exports

    3. 3

      Brazilian vinyl polymers to Colombia multiply 9x over two years

      Colombia

    4. 4

      Brazil's egg exports to the US jump roughly 1,000-fold through April

      Agribusiness

    5. 5

      Brazilian pharma imports from China jump +608% in the period

      Anomaly