
Brazil’s Sugar Exports in 2024: A Record-Breaking Year
Brazil’s sugar juggernaut hit top gear in 2024: a record 38.24 million tons shipped for US$18.6 billion, supercharged by India’s export ban and a strong Brazilian crush. Flows were clear-cut—bulk raw sugar to Asia/Middle East, containerized refined to Africa. Indonesia (3.46 Mt) led buyers, followed by India (3.33 Mt, raw for refining), China (3.02 Mt), UAE (2.51 Mt), and Algeria (2.23 Mt, mainly refined). Logistics scaled smoothly: ~90% moved in bulk via Santos/Paranaguá, while containers (≈10% and rising) unlocked smaller, higher-value lanes. Monthly peaks smashed records—August and September each near 3.95 Mt—with Q3 throughput stabilizing global prices that might otherwise have spiked. Six big themes defined the year: unprecedented volumes, India’s absence, Africa’s pull for refined sugar, a container rebound, pronounced month-to-month swings, and striking port efficiency at extreme loads. Looking to 2025, exports likely ease as India tiptoes back, weather risk lingers, and ethanol parity tugs cane away from sugar—but the 2024 playbook (raw in bulk, refined in boxes, disciplined scheduling) gives Brazil a flexible base to stay in front.



