US, Europe and Japan Import from This Brazilian Carnauba Wax Maker

In the northeastern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Norte, a small company is exporting a product typical to the region: carnauba wax.

In reality, the product exists in other countries, but it can only be extracted in industrial scale in northeastern Brazil, specifically in the states of Rio Grande do Norte, Piauí­ and Ceará.

Making use of this benefit of nature, company Ortal, from Mossoró, produces 200 tons of wax, of which 80% is exported.

The main destinations are the United States, Germany and Japan. Ortal also sells to an Egyptian buyer, who resells the product in his country.

And, according to the company’s export director, Márcia Gomes de Paula, there is a Syrian buyer interested in the product. "Our objective, now, is to expand sales to other Arab countries," pointed out the director.

Carnauba wax is extracted from the leaves of the Copernicia prunifera palm – named after astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus -, which is also found in Africa and Sri Lanka. The wax is extracted from a powder removed from the leaves.

Ortal works with an average of 1,000 producers, mainly from the cities of Assu, Apodi and Russas, in the state of Ceará. They pick the leaves during the harvest season, which is from August to January.

After drying, they scrape the leaves, heat up the powder and melt the wax into bars, which they sell to Ortal. The company then processes and clarifies the product. Extraction does not affect the palm. Cutting makes the tree’s lifecycle longer.

Carnauba wax has varied applications. It may be used both in personal hygiene and in food products. "Some chocolates have a fine layer of the wax so they do not melt," explained Márcia.

Apart from that, it is used in photographic film, medicine capsules, dyes, dehydrated vegetables, lacquer, etc. The list is vast.

Ortal was established in 1988 by João Melo, who was a carnauba wax farmer before opening his company. Between the office and factory, there are only 20 employees, but over 1,000 indirect jobs are generated.

According to Márcia, in 2005 the company started paying greater attention to the foreign market, eliminating brokers who earned 3% of the profit on sales, and started negotiating directly with foreign buyers. Since then, relations with foreign buyers have improved.

"It was better for everybody. We stopped paying a commission and, thus, improved our selling price," stated the export director. Revenues only didn’t boom due to low exchange rates – an appreciated Brazilian real against the United States dollar.

Contact

Ortal
Telephones: (+55 84) 3316-6241 / 3316-8791
Site:
www.ortal.com.br
E-mail: marciadepaula@ortal.com.br

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Maracatu New York on Brooklyn street parade

Religion and Dance, Brazil’s Maracatu Takes On New York

In 2000, Scott Kettner, 29, a music graduate from New School University, moved to ...

Brazil’s Company Big Plans to Push Its Coffee into the US, EU and Asia

B&D Food Corporation, a company that manufactures coffee products such as roasted ground, and ...

Brazil and Cameroon Sign Cooperation Accords

Brazilian government signed yesterday cooperation agreements with the government of The Republic of Cameroon ...

Lula Says There Will Be No Coverup of Corruption in Brazil

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, speaking at the IV Global Forum on ...

Brazilian Food Giant Sadia Beefs Up Old Plant with US$ 79 Million Investment

Sadia's old plant in Toledo, in the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, which received ...

Brazilian Investments Totalled 110 Billion in 2004

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

After Cattle Disease Blow, Brazil Takes Steps to Prevent Bird Flu

Brazil’s Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, and Supply, Roberto Rodrigues, said today that the Brazilian ...

Brazil’s UNESP Gets LatAm’s Most Powerful Computer Network

Brazil's UNESP (São Paulo State University) will be installing in the coming weeks its ...

Morocco Becomes Brazil’s Main Sardine Supplier

Morocco is taking over the Venezuelan position as a supplier of sardines to Brazil. ...

Brazil Getting Ready to Make Stronger and Cheaper Concrete with Bagasse

Last week a team of Brazilian researchers from the University of São Carlos revealed ...