Data from the Brazilian Association of Animal Protein (ABPA) shows that Brazilian pork exports (considering all products, both fresh and processed) totaled 140,000 tons in April. This volume exceeds by 8.3% the amount recorded in the same period last year, which was 129,200 tons. Export revenue reached US$328.2 million in the fourth month of this year, a result 8.8% higher than that obtained in April 2025, which was US$301.5 million. In the first four months of the year, Brazilian pork shipments reached 532,200 tons, a figure 14.2% higher than the same period in 2025, which was 466,000 tons. In terms of revenue, the accumulated growth reached 14.1%, with US$1.244 billion between January and April of this year, compared to US$1.090 billion recorded in the first four months of last year. Among the main destinations for Brazilian exports in April, the Philippines remains in the lead, with 35,900 tons shipped, a volume 20.6% higher than that recorded in the same period last year. Next are Japan, with 16,600 tons (+131.9%), China, with 11,800 tons (-21.6%), Chile, with 11,100 tons (+22.8%), Hong Kong, with 8,000 tons (-34.3%), Vietnam, with 5,500 tons (+44.6%), Argentina, with 5,300 tons (-8.7%), Singapore, with 5,100 tons (-24.3%), Uruguay, with 4,600 tons (+12.7%) and Mexico, with 4,400 tons (-40.3%). “The international flow of Brazilian pork remains quite positive in 2026, especially in Asian markets, which continue to expand their demand for animal protein. We observe significant progress in higher value-added destinations, such as Japan, in addition to the expansion of the Philippines as a major market for the Brazilian sector. The positive performance in virtually all importing markets reinforces the positive outlook projected by ABPA for this year,” assesses the association's president, Ricardo Santin.
This text was translated by machine from Brazilian Portuguese.