in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul
Some of the country’s top agricultural commodities may see increased demand
benefitting from the US-China trade war - Daniel Marenco/Dialogue Earth
The trade dispute between the United States and China is weakening the US position in the Chinese market
Tariffs of more than 200% and mutual retaliation are also fuelling expectations that Brazilian agribusiness will expand exports to China
while environmentalists warn of increased pressure on forest areas
beef and chicken have the greatest potential for immediate demand growth
Having already consolidated its position in these markets
especially given the possibility of a record grain harvest this year
“Growth could be significant in the short term,” Camila Amigo
international analyst at the Brazil-China Business Council (CEBC)
“This has already happened in previous moments of the trade war
US President Donald Trump’s first administration increased tariffs on several countries
The confrontation affected global production chains and Brazil benefitted by taking over most of the US soy market in China
according to the US Department of Agriculture
newly increased foreign demand could raise Brazilian food prices
which have been rising faster than general inflation since the Covid-19 pandemic
Brazil’s logistical infrastructure for transporting grain
already has bottlenecks and could face congestion as exports increase
peaks in foreign demand for Brazilian agricultural commodities have historically also led to increased deforestation
a researcher at the Amazon Institute for People and the Environment (Imazon)
there will tend to be more deforestation again,” he says
Studies and analysts indicate
that Amazon deforestation jumped between 1995 and 2004 as Brazil’s agricultural areas and cattle population expanded to meet growing international demand for soy and beef
Tensions between the United States and China began to rise in 2017
during Donald Trump’s first term in office
with the conflict coming to a head in 2018 as the two countries announced a range of tariffs upon each other’s goods
China imposed a 25% tariff on 106 American products
Trade disputes simmered with the signing of a tentative agreement between Washington and Beijing in 2020
followed by a shift in political focus after Joe Biden took office the following year
his administration largely upheld most Trump-era tariffs
and even increased rates on some Chinese products
Trump’s return to the presidency in 2025 has since reignited the conflict on a new scale
the United States managed to recover part of its soybean and beef exports to China
Brazil had already filled the gap left during the height of the trade war and consolidated its lead in the Chinese market
Brazil overtook the US to become China’s top agricultural supplier
shipping a total of USD 37 billion in goods
according to a study published this year by research institute Insper Agro Global
Although other factors may have had an influence
shipments of Brazilian meat and soy to China grew significantly between 2016 – before the Trump administration’s disputes – and 2024
according to foreign trade data from the Brazilian government
Meat exports to China in that period increased eightfold
Analysts believe the tariffs will cause Brazilian exports to grow less this time around
due to Brazil’s already consolidated position in the Chinese market
“The impact of this trade war on Brazil will not be as great as under the first Trump administration,” says Camila Amigo
No one knows how long the trade war will continue
The US has been stepping up its pressure and China has signalled it will not let up
representatives of the Brazilian agricultural sector believe the advantage will not last
“The comparative advantage is very short term… We can’t think we’re going to take away the US market in China,” says Ingo Plöger
vice-president of the Brazilian Agribusiness Association
“China knows where it can hit the United States and is already acting on it
and the United States also knows where it is limiting China
The countries will end up sitting down to negotiate and reach an agreement.”
the sudden increase in demand raises the risk of small and medium-sized producers expanding their areas irregularly
assistant professor at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
“The expansion of the agricultural frontier is often linked to violence and the invasion of Indigenous or quilombola lands,” says Weins
the latter referring to descendants of Afro-Brazilian communities established by escaped slaves
Brazil exports meat to China from steers that are less than 30 months old
the strict requirements on this so-called “boi China” – beef that meets the necessary Chinese standards – do not include environmental criteria
cattle may be raised in areas of illegal deforestation
Strong demand from China for beef has also been seen to put pressure on the Brazilian market by raising prices
“The additional demand pushes some people to deforest,” says Barreto of Imazon
people start deforesting to meet domestic demand.”
Niklas Weins emphasises that the recent weakening of Brazil’s currency
In the first week following Trump’s announcement of so-called “reciprocal” tariffs on around 90 trading partners on 2 April
the market reacted with a boost for the dollar and a general fall in other currencies
the third highest rate in the world
“This will probably have a direct effect on food prices,” he adds
public policies aimed at sustainable agricultural expansion are also gaining momentum
She works on monitoring Brazil’s pastures at the Remote Sensing and Geoprocessing Laboratory of the Federal University of Goiás
Teles cites ways to encourage production in areas that are already open and underused
These are the ABC+ Plan – a national strategy to promote low-carbon agriculture – and the National Programme for the Conversion of Degraded Pastures
as well as the use of monitoring technologies
“Deforestation is becoming less and less economically viable,” says Teles
“There is greater supervision and legal restrictions
as well as a high environmental and climate cost.”
there are still institutional gaps that increase the Amazon’s vulnerability to deforestation
These include the large extent of public lands not yet designated as protected or belonging to a group – a situation that encourages illegal occupation and speculation
They also include the absence of an effective cattle-tracking system
and inconsistent actions by public authorities
Even institutions like the Brazilian Development Bank (Bndes)
a shareholder in large meatpacking companies like JBS
have failed to control environmental risks
the Ministry of Agriculture did not reply to requests for comment
Barreto says that deforestation is driven in part by flaws in public policies and the lack of requirements that Chinese beef be traceable
He says this has a solution: “If China adds an environmental demand to the requirements of the China beef
stimulating a more sustainable use of pastures without the need for deforestation.”
Original article published in Dialoque Earth
All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced
provided it is not altered and proper credit is given
All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced
provided it is not altered and proper credit is given.