Brazilian polyethylene (PE) imports in January-October 2025 were only mildly affected by the government's recent anti-dumping duties for resin produced in the US ($199.04/t) and Canada ($238.49/t), with the US still the top PE seller to the country.
Brazil's PE imports hit $1.36bn in the period, a 3.7pc decrease compared with $1.41bn in the same period in 2024, according to official Brazilian trade data. Import volume also showed a small decline from 1.25mn t in 2024 to 1.22mn t in 2025, a 2.3pc drop.
The US remained the leading supplier, accounting for 68.2pc of total PE sales, exporting 832,611t in 2025 until now, down 7.4pc compared with the prior year. Argentina increased its share to 14.4pc in volume, positioned as the second-largest exporter with 176,375t year to date, a 31.1pc increase compared with the same period in 2024. Canada's share fell to 3.77pc in volume, totaling 46,018t year to date, a decline of 39.7pc.
The total export volume for PE between January and October 2025 was 522,903t, a 7.5pc increase from the same period last year, when it reached 485,978t. In terms of values, sales for the 10 months of the year hit $654mn, a slight decrease of 0.84pc year on year.
Argentina was the main buyer, increasing its share to 20.1pc and shipping 105,246t, up 22.5pc in volume year to date. Belgium came in second place with 65,871t, amounting to 12.6pc of total exports market share and marking a 11.9pc hike on annual comparison. Third was Chile, with PE purchases of 63,131t and a 12pc share, despite the decrease of 8.08pc on a yearly basis. Closing the top four, China had an 8.64pc market share and total imports of 45,171t year to date, a 5.55pc yearly comparison growth.

