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  1. Exports

Singapore jumps 10 places to top-3 in Brazilian crude oil

Singapore climbed from 13th to 3rd place in Brazil's crude oil export ranking in 2026, posting US$ 294.9M FOB — a 10-position leap in the Jan–Apr period.

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Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter
Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter

Summary

  • •Singapore climbed from #13 to #3 in Jan–Apr 2026 — a 10-position jump
  • •FOB of US$ 294.9M — +20% growth versus the same period in 2025
  • •Singapore operates as a trading and re-export hub for Southeast Asia
  • •Movement consistent with Brazil's crude buyer diversification strategy
  • •Average monthly FOB of US$ 73.7M — historically elevated for the corridor

In four months, Singapore went from a minor player to a top-3 destination for Brazilian crude oil. Between January and April 2026, the city-state climbed 10 positions in the export ranking — from 13th to top-3 — posting accumulated FOB of US$ 294.9M, up from US$ 245.7M in the same period of 2025.

The competitive sprint

A 10-position jump in four months is unusual for crude oil, a product where rankings tend to be structurally stable. Brazil's major crude buyers — China, the U.S., and Europe — typically anchor the top slots year-round. Singapore's entry into the top-3 points to either a significant cargo redirection or a pullback from the destinations that previously held positions 2 and 3.

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Singapore is one of the world's leading refining and oil trading hubs. Its position concentrates both direct demand and re-export capacity for regional markets — making the top-3 entry even more significant: part of this volume may flow onward to other Asian buyers.

The number in context

A FOB of US$ 294.9M over four months translates to a monthly average of US$ 73.7M. For the Brazil–Singapore crude oil corridor, that is a historically elevated level. The +20% growth versus the same period in 2025 (US$ 245.7M) confirms the increase is not price-driven alone — volumes are expanding.

Brazil has been progressively broadening its crude buyer base, reducing dependency on China as the dominant buyer. Singapore's entry into the top-3 fits that strategy — more destinations, less concentration risk, stronger pricing leverage.

The Asian hub as a strategic partner

Singapore operates as a logistical node for crude cargoes destined for Southeast Asia, South Korea, and Japan. Contracts routed through Singapore often reflect real demand from neighboring countries that prefer using Singaporean trading infrastructure. This means April volumes may understate the true growth in Asian demand for Brazilian crude.

Petrobras has been signaling buyer portfolio diversification since 2023 — the Singapore data is consistent with that direction.

Implications for you

For exporters:

  • Determine whether Singapore volumes reflect direct demand or regional re-export — this defines whether the relationship should be managed as a direct buyer or trading hub intermediary;
  • Map which contracts expired during Jan–Apr that may have redirected cargoes to Singapore — and whether renewals are scheduled.

For importers:

  • Refiners and regional traders operating in Singapore should monitor Brazilian cargo availability via the hub — the +20% growth signals stable supply with potential continuity;
  • Evaluate medium-term contract terms before competing regional demand (Middle East, Canada) pushes pricing back up.

Twelve months ago, Singapore was ranked 13th. Today it sits in the top-3.

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

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Sources

  • ·MDIC ComexStat — capítulo 2709 (2026)
  • ·Kyrodata — dashboard interativo SH4 2709 (2026)
  • ·ANP — Dados Abertos (2026)

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ExportsSingaporeOil & gasRanking shift
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