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Lotes de soja brasileira fora de conformidade na China

  • : Agriculture
  • 25/01/22

Autoridades chinesas proibiram temporariamente importações de soja brasileira de unidades específicas de algumas tradings, após "detecção de não conformidade" em suas remessas, informou o Ministério da Agricultura e Pecuária (Mapa) nesta quarta-feira.

A Administração Geral de Alfândega da China (GACC, na sigla em inglês) notificou autoridades brasileiras sobre componentes não autorizados identificados em remessas de soja de cinco empresas, mas nenhuma foi totalmente proibida de exportar a oleaginosa para o país asiático.

O governo brasileiro esclareceu que componentes não autorizados foram identificados em cargas pertencentes a uma unidade de cada uma das cinco tradings. As cinco unidades estão temporariamente proibidas de enviar cargas para a China, enquanto as investigações continuam, informou o Mapa. O governo brasileiro não divulgou os nomes das empresas.

Outras unidades dessas empresas ainda estão autorizadas a exportar para a China. Fontes de uma das tradings afetadas confirmaram a proibição temporária à Argus, destacando que traços de pragas e pesticidas não autorizados foram identificados nas cargas. A equipe jurídica dessa empresa está supervisionando o assunto, disseram fontes à Argus.

É comum que a alfândega chinesa inspecione cada carga que chega em seus portos, com autoridades chinesas e brasileiras trocando informações diretamente sobre os resultados obtidos.

Alguns participantes de mercado informaram que este caso pode levar a um processo de inspeção e liberação mais rigoroso para a soja, enquanto outros estão confiantes de que a proibição temporária e a investigação são apenas de rotina.

A China é o maior importador de soja do mundo, recebendo pelo menos 60pc das importações globais da oleaginosa a cada ano, de acordo com o Departamento de Agricultura dos Estados Unidos (USDA, na sigla em inglês). O Brasil responde pela maior parcela dos volumes importados, enquanto os compradores chineses recebem a maior parte das exportações de oleaginosas do país. A Associação Nacional dos Exportadores de Cereais (Anec) estima que a China recebeu 76pc das 97,3 milhões de toneladas (t) que o Brasil exportou em 2024.


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25/05/05

Mexico's manufacturing contraction deepens in April

Mexico's manufacturing contraction deepens in April

Mexico City, 5 May (Argus) — Activity in Mexico's manufacturing sector shrank for a 13th straight month in April, with declines accelerating in production and new orders, according to a survey of purchasing managers. The manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 45.5 in April from 46.9 in March, finance executives' association IMEF said, moving further below the 50-point threshold that separates growth from contraction. US tariffs imposed since March are adding pressure to Mexico's manufacturing sector, which makes up about a fifth of the national economy. The auto industry, responsible for roughly 18pc of manufacturing GDP, may be the hardest hit by the new measures, including a 25pc tariff on auto parts that took effect 3 May. Mexico remains the top exporter of vehicles to the US, supplying 23pc of all US auto imports in 2024. But IMEF said tariffs compound broader, mostly domestic headwinds, including reduced public spending and investor uncertainty stemming from sweeping legal and regulatory reforms. New investment has stalled since late 2024. The PMI index for new orders fell by 2.5 points to 41.8, the lowest since June 2020. Production dropped by 2.5 points to 43.6, while employment fell by 0.6 point to 46.4. New orders and production have now been in contraction for 14 straight months, and employment for 15. Inventories saw the steepest drop in April, falling 4 points to 46.3 — sliding from expansion to contraction — as manufacturers accelerated shipments after tariff implementation dates were confirmed. IMEF's non-manufacturing PMI — which covers services and commerce — remained in contraction for a fifth consecutive month but edged up by 0.5 points to 49.0 in April. Within that index, new orders rose by 0.6 points to 48.1, employment increased 1.3 points to 48.6 and production held steady at 47.5. By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia re-elects renewable-focused Labor party


25/05/05
25/05/05

Australia re-elects renewable-focused Labor party

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US bill would extend expired biofuel credits


25/05/01
25/05/01

US bill would extend expired biofuel credits

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Mexican economy grows 0.6pc in 1Q


25/04/30
25/04/30

Mexican economy grows 0.6pc in 1Q

Mexico City, 30 April (Argus) — Mexico's economy expanded at an annualized rate of 0.6pc in the first quarter, with solid growth in the agriculture sector offsetting a slowdown in industry. The result came in at the high end of analyst estimates and slightly above the 0.5pc GDP growth reported by statistics agency Inegi for the fourth quarter of 2024. Still, it marks the second-slowest quarterly growth in the past 16 quarters. Most of the first quarter's GDP growth came from a 6pc expansion in the agricultural sector, which more than reversed the 4.6pc contraction recorded in the fourth quarter of 2024. The industrial sector — including mining, manufacturing and construction — shrank for a second straight quarter, contracting by 1.4pc after a 1.2pc drop in the previous quarter. Manufacturing faced tariff-related uncertainty during the quarter, though investment in the sector had already been slowing for months. The contraction was softened by manufacturers ramping up production ahead of US tariffs, with the risk of trade-driven inflation also pushing builders to contain construction costs, according to market sources. These effects are expected to fade in the second quarter and worsen in the third if high US tariffs on Mexican goods persist, said Victor Herrera, head of economic studies at finance executive association IMEF, "especially as supply chains are hit by dwindling inventories." Services expanded by an annualized 1.3pc in the first quarter, compared with a 2.1pc growth in the fourth quarter of 2024. This marks the slowest growth in services since the end of Covid-19 restrictions in early 2021. By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

CME launches Black Sea CVB Wheat Argus futures


25/04/30
25/04/30

CME launches Black Sea CVB Wheat Argus futures

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