Brazil’s Seara, Sadia and Marfrig recently put out veggie burgers, breaded items, sausage and kibbeh to cater to the demand for meat substitutes.
Browsing: Special Reports
Brazilian machinery and service companies have invested in creations that integrate environmental and economic sustainability.
ANBA visited The Camel Soap Factory in Dubai. Founded in 2013 by South African expat Stevi Lowmass, the company has its handmade soaps as Expo 2020 licensed products.
Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation president Celso Moretti visited the Arab country and discussed partnerships in several fronts, including Africa. The institution could open an office in Abu Dhabi. “We’ve identified four big pillars of cooperation,” he told ANBA.
Imports of the product went up year-to-date through November. Consumers are becoming more exacting and some supermarkets are offering Arab brands.
New regions of prominence on the national stage share the cultivation around and deep into the woods. This experience takes place where the culture seems unusual, such as Rondônia and Ceará.
Mato Grosso climbed from the Brazil’s sixth to third’s largest suppliers to the Arab countries. Corn, soy and beef exports were up.
Four Brazilian products earned geographic indications this year. The membership comes with a label that certifies the production, adding value and generating independence.
The last story of ANBA series on the country talks about Latakia on the Mediterranean coast. A tourism region, it suffered with the crisis and the loss of many of its sons, soldiers that died in combat in other cities.
Crac des Chevalier, a Crusader castle in Syria, was occupied for two years by armed groups and damaged during the fights. On top of a mountain, the monument oversees the Valley of Christians and is the theme of ANBA’s fourth story on the country.
In its third special report on Syria, ANBA recounts a visit to the city that was full of armed groups during the war that broke out in 2011, and to one of the country’s main archaeological sites – damaged, but still impressive.
In the town of Maaloula, which has been a Christian pilgrimage site for centuries, some of the landmarks have been damaged. One of a few places in the world where Aramaic is still spoken, the village is the subject of the second story in an ANBA series on the Arab country.
Over the course of a week, ANBA visited war-torn cities, historical and religious sites across the country. Damascus is the subject of the first in a series of articles starting this Tuesday.
For a few years now, investments are being made to improve quality. The result is rising exports to countries like Algeria, the second biggest destination.

