Brazil expands market access in Asia-Pacific and Eurasia through new sanitary agreements

Brazil concluded negotiations that enable the export of new agricultural products to New Zealand and Turkey, within the framework of its strategy to diversify external markets.

In the case of New Zealand, the entry of thermally processed pork and ovine by-products was authorized, expanding Brazil’s presence in a high-income market. In 2025, Brazilian agricultural exports to that destination reached approximately USD 107 million.

For its part, Turkey approved access for honey and apiculture products, deepening an already consolidated trade relationship. That country imported more than USD 3.2 billion in Brazilian agricultural products in 2025, with soybeans, cotton, and coffee as the main goods.

These developments demonstrate the growing relevance of sanitary and phytosanitary negotiations as a tool for international insertion, as well as Latin America’s strategy of diversifying destinations beyond its traditional partners, including markets in the Asia-Pacific.

País: Brazil

Fuente: Secretary General of ALADI based on the data from Latin America - Asia Pacific Observatory