-
SILICON VALLEY: Indian-origin executive named CEO of Microsoft Gaming - March 5, 2026
-
WASHINGTON: Indian-American lawyer at center of Trump’s biggest legal setback - March 4, 2026
-
TEXAS: ’15 of my cousins came here on H-1B’ - March 3, 2026
-
NEW YORK: Indian-origin doctor shares mother’s immigrant success journey in US - March 2, 2026
-
ARIZONA: Indian-origin scientist wins Arizona State University’s top Science Prize - March 1, 2026
-
WASHINGTON: Balaji Krishnamoorthy becoming Uber CFO amid ongoing visa row - February 28, 2026
-
LUCKNOW: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on HCL-Foxconn chip facility in UP - February 27, 2026
-
WASHINGTON: 55% Indian Americans Disapprove Of Trump’s India Policies: Survey - February 26, 2026
-
WASHINGTON: Trump Praises Indian American Harmeet Dhillon Amid Harvard Case - February 26, 2026
-
MUMBAI: Ranbir Kapoor to set up new RK Studios - February 25, 2026
SAO PAULO: India unseats Brazil as No.1 food supplier to Arab nations after 15 years
SAO PAULO: India surpassed Brazil in food exports to the League of Arab States for the first time in 15 years as the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted trade flows in 2020, according to data provided by the Arab-Brazil Chamber of Commerce to Reuters on Tuesday.
The Arab world is among Brazil’s most important trade partners, but its distance from those markets took its toll as the pandemic rattled global logistics.
Brazil accounted for 8.15% of the total agribusiness products imported by the 22 League members last year, whereas India captured 8.25% of that trade, ending Brazil’s 15-year advantage, the data showed.
Despite remaining competitive “from the farm gate in,” Brazil lost ground to India and other exporters such as Turkey, the United States, France and Argentina amid a disruption of traditional shipping routes.
Brazilian shipments to Saudi Arabia that once took 30 days could now take up to 60 days, according to the Chamber, whereas India’s geographic advantages allow it to ship fruits, vegetables, sugar, grains and meat in as little as week.
Brazil’s agricultural exports to the Arab League rose just 1.4% by value to $8.17 billion last year. Between January and October this year, sales totaled $6.78 billion, up 5.5%, as logistics problems subsided, Chamber data showed.
China’s push to boost its own food inventories during the pandemic also diverted some of Brazil’s trade with the Arabs, leading countries such as Saudi Arabia to step up promotion of domestic food production, while seeking alternative suppliers.
“It’s a turning point. The Saudis are still big buyers, but they are also net re-exporters of food,” the Chamber said in a statement.



