Data from the first half of 2021 shows hair care products and deodorants boosted the upward situation.
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Some Arab consumers already acquire Brazilian beauty products, and an even larger share is willing to start buying. The Arab Brazilian Chamber addressed this market in a warm-up event for a series of B2Bs focused on the sector to take place in July.
The Arab Brazilian Chamber will host on Friday (18) a Warm-Up session to prepare for virtual meetings that will take place in July between Brazilian cosmetic suppliers and Arab importers. Registration is open.
Nashwa Bakr took office as commercial consul of Egypt in São Paulo last February. She talked to ANBA about her career, first impressions of Brazil, and plans to strengthen commercial ties.
With almost 30 years of expertise, Alitec is arriving in the United Arab Emirates. The manufacturer specializes in high-pressure homogenizers. In addition to these machines, it wants to export stainless steel tanks for the food industry.
Cosmetics firm Bitarra Beauty has been around for 20 years and started a partnership with a representative in the United Arab Emirates earlier this year.
Private Cosméticos of Brazil, which specializes in vegan products, has been offering halal items since early last February. Now, the goal is to expand in Muslim markets.
An online business meeting saw personal care, perfume and cosmetics industry professionals go over industry figures and what’s to come once the pandemic has blown over.
Company Brazil Cosmetics’ Amazon Flowers product line started shipping to Yemen last February. The line has a local representative, who joined a B2B early this month looking to boost sales.
Yamá Cosméticos broke into the hair product market in Qatar. The 53-year-old company started targeting the Arab market in 2018, when it participated in a beauty trade show in Dubai, UAE.
The Brazilian certifier will have an e-booth in the event the ABCC is set to host next week. Fambras Halal chairman Mohamed Zoghbi told ANBA about new products getting halal-certified in Brazil, including cosmetics.
The 16-year-old company Adélia Mendonça Cosmetics now focus in expanding its business into the Arab countries. The brand got a certification for all its products in September.
The Brazilian hair product company ships product to nine Arab countries, with sales expected to amount to 50 tons this year. It recently launched a new line featuring items made of extracellular enzymes from Agaricus Blazei mushrooms.
Opportunities are available at DAFZA for manufacturers of sugar, beef and poultry, coffee and non-food products such as aircraft and vehicle parts, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals.