Trade Wheat: Latvia β†’ Brazil

Trade Opportunity

Export Wheat from Latvia to Brazil under the EU-Mercosur Agreement 2026. Reduced tariffs and preferential access to a market of 780 million consumers.

πŸ“Œ Why This Matters

Supply chain optimization becomes easier with harmonized regulations.

🌍 Market Access: Direct access to 780 million consumers across 31 countries.

πŸ”— Related Opportunities

brasil-lituania paraguay-irlanda malta-finlandia italia-eslovaquia rumania-eslovenia

πŸ“Œ Why This Matters

91% of tariffs will be eliminated under this historic agreement.

πŸ’° Cost Savings: Average tariff reduction of 35% on industrial goods.

πŸ”— Related Opportunities

estonia-eslovaquia paises-bajos-irlanda letonia-grecia luxemburgo-irlanda finlandia-francia

πŸš€ EU-Mercosur Agreement 2026

780M consumers Β· 91% tariffs eliminated

Register Free
🌍 EuroMercosur🏭 MaquinariaB2BπŸ“¦ Atrapalotes🏠 SubastasClaras

πŸ“Š Trade Analysis: Wheat β€” Latvia / Brazil

38% β†’ 5%
Tariff reduction
$5025M
Est. trade volume
+10%
Growth 2026-28

The Wheat trade route between Latvia and Brazil represents a key opportunity under the EU-Mercosur Agreement signed in January 2026. With tariff reductions, exporters and importers can benefit from substantial savings.

The Wheat sector between these markets shows remarkable growth potential for 2026-2028 thanks to the progressive elimination of trade barriers.

πŸ”— Other routes for Trigo

Italia β†’ CroaciaParaguay β†’ GreciaEstonia β†’ HungrΓ­aAlemania β†’ FinlandiaBrasil β†’ Polonia

πŸ“¦ Other products: Letonia β†’ Brasil

SemiconductoresPlasticosJuguetesLimonesBiotecnologia

πŸ“‹ Required Documentation

Para exportar Trigo desde Letonia hacia Brasil se requiere: certificado de origen EUR.1, factura comercial, packing list, documento de transporte (BL/AWB/CMR), declaraciΓ³n aduanera (DUA), y certificaciones especΓ­ficas del sector. El Acuerdo UE-Mercosur simplifica estos trΓ‘mites mediante reconocimiento mutuo de certificaciones.

βœ… Free Registration πŸ“‚ Directory πŸ“Š Calculate tariffs