August 22, 2025
Brazil's chicken exports may drop 2% on bird flu embargoes

Chicken exports from Brazil are projected to fall by 2% to 5.2 million metric tonnes this year, due to the impact of trade embargoes by large importers following a local outbreak of bird flu in May, according to the meat group Associação Brasileira de Proteína Animal (ABPA).
Brazil, the world's largest exporter, reported its first-ever bird flu outbreak in a chicken breeding farm in the south.
Countries like China, Brazil's top trade partner, have not yet lifted trade embargoes even though the Brazilian government managed to control the outbreak within a month. Other trade partners have gradually eased restrictions over time.
ABPA had previously expected Brazilian chicken exports to rise as much as 1.9% this year.
The group, which represents firms like BRF and JBS, said Brazil's egg exports were forecast to jump almost 117% to 40,000 tonnes in 2025, due largely to strong US demand as egg supplies fell due to a bird flu outbreak there.
ABPA said it expected Brazilian chicken output to rise as much as 3% this year to 15.4 million tonnes, citing a potential increase in per capita consumption of up to 5.4% domestically.
For pork, Brazilian production this year is forecast to grow by as much as 2.2% to 5.42 million tonnes while exports could rise by 7.2% to 1.45 million tonnes, the group said.
- Reuters










