Brazilian company redesigns plants and products based on the requirements of the halal market. As it has gained in quality, it now aims at exporting premium honey to Muslim-majority countries.
Browsing: halal certification
Brazilian halal certifier was accredited to certify product’s compliance with the rules of Malaysian market.
QPrime Açaí obtained halal certification this year, intending to start exporting. The company has a plant in the San José Industrial Park in the city of Cotia, São Paulo.
Brazilian food and beverage companies can now apply to get their first halal certification via the Halal Brazil project that grants an aid of 50% of the costs.
The halal market was the topic of a webinar promoted by Invest Paraná in partnership with the Arab Brazilian Chamber. The Brazilian Southern state has potential in the food, textile, and cosmetics sectors.
The Arab Brazilian Chamber and ApexBrasil have opened applications for Brazilian halal certifiers interested in certifying food and beverage firms backed by the project.
Plena Alimentos is based in Minas Gerais and started exporting back in 2013. Now it caters to nearly all Arab states and is investing in processed products to diversify its portfolio and boost sales.
The cities of Belo Horizonte, Uberlândia, and Pouso Alegre will have events on the halal market and certification on April 11, 24, and 26, respectively. Registration is open to food and beverage companies.
Baldoni, a honey and derivatives industry, has certified its main product as halal. The brand targets the Arab market and intends to triplicate sales.
Brazilian certifier has been accredited by the Gulf Accreditation Center to certify halal cosmetics, chemicals, and industrialized and processed beef. It will now be able to certify companies of these sectors that want to export to the Gulf.
For the quality manager of Islamic Food and Nutrition Council of America, having a unified system would make the industry more efficient. He spoke on the second day of the Global Halal Brazil business forum.
‘Sustainability and technology in the Brazilian food sector’ was the subject of the last panel on the first day of the Global Halal Brazil business forum, promoted by the Arab Brazilian Chamber and FAMBRAS Halal.
As it covers different stages of the production chain, certification makes production and food safer, said Ali Zoghbi, from FAMBRAS. The executive lectured this Thursday (1) in the online course on the Islamic world.
Brazil’s certifier SIILHalal and consulting firm Najmma have partnered up to provide business advisory.