Brazil Tries to Capture Arabs Taste Beyond Mango and Melons

Carambola of Brazil, the starfruitNow is the time of the Brazilian fruit get it own space in the Arab market. The stand of the Brazilian Fruit Institute at Gulfood, in the food sector, in Dubai, should cover 90 square meters, almost double the size of the stand in last year’s edition.

The exhibitors have also increased, rising from three to eight. “It is still a small figure, but the market in the Middle East is young and unknown to Brazilian companies,” stated the executive manager at the Ibraf, Valeska de Oliveira.

According to her, the Arab market is targeted by the Brazilian Fruit program, an Ibraf project, in partnership with the Brazilian Export and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex-Brasil), whose objective is to place Brazil in the center of the global fruit market. Gulfood should take place from February 21st to 24th.

In this edition, Brazilian companies are going to exhibit mango, Brazil nuts, guava, figs, papaya, tangerine, grape juice and concentrated juice, among other dried and processed fruit.

According to Valeska, apart from the exhibitors, another six companies should visit the fair to learn about opportunities in the market. “Gulfood is the main fair for our products in the Middle East,” she said.

Among the companies and associations exhibiting are Ruette Spices, Atlântica Foods, Caiba Indústria e Comércio, Rio Doce Importação e Exportação, the Brazilian Institute of Wine (Ibravin) and Exporta Minas.

They are going to take to the Arab nations some exotic products that differ from the traditional international taste, among them star fruit, persimmon and 100% whole grape juice.

This is the third time that the Ibraf participates in the Gulfood. According to Valeska, it has already been possible to feel that Brazilian products are well accepted by the Arabs and the receptiveness by local companies is also great.

According to figures supplied by the Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce, the Arab countries imported from Brazil a total of US$ 9.31 million in fresh fruit last year, representing an increase of 8.4% over 2008. Grapes, melons, apples and mangoes were the main products shipped.

Among the processed fruit, which includes mashed fruit, nuts and concentrated juice, the growth of Brazilian sales to the Arab countries was 30.2%, with exports of US$ 21.46 million. The main importers were Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Algeria.

The matter of logistics is still a challenge to Brazilian exporters. According to Valeska, a large part of sales to the Arabs go through Rotterdam, in the Netherlands. “Our objective is to shorten the distance and to start exporting directly,” added the manager.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Names and Faces

Whatever your prejudices or opinions regarding race, ethnicity, eugenics, and miscegenation, you don’t know ...

IMF Warns: Commodities Bonanza for Brazil and LatAm Is Over

Latin American economies are facing an awkward combination of slowing activity, more difficult external ...

Lula Calls for New Global Order and More Patience with Iran

Among the subjects discussed at the BRICs summit, in separate meetings between president Luiz ...

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

By Brazzil Magazine RIO Amor e Erotismo ­ Contos da Comunidade Kaxinawa (Love and ...

Brazilian Investments Totalled 110 Billion in 2004

The investment projects announced by companies in Brazil in the second half of last ...

Brazil Opens Microbe Bank to the World

Hundreds of bacteria, fungi and yeast species, mostly collected from the wilds of Brazil, ...

Seeing Beyond the Immediate

Los Angeles is a city with more than a thousand live-entertainment options every night ...

Brazil’s Lula Can Still Redeem His Name by Foregoing a Second Mandate

Perhaps never before in the history of Brazil have persons with such respectable biographies ...

Tragedy and Poverty Are Irrelevant in Brazil as Long as Lula Keeps High in Polls

All of Brazil was shocked to witness two advisors to the Presidency of the ...

WTO Examines Brazil Complaint That It Lost US$ 4 Bi from US Cotton Subsidies

The World Trade Organization (WTO) is going to analyze whether the subsidies granted by ...