São Paulo • Tashkent

About Us

Brazilian and Uzbekistan Trade House
TRADE HOUSE . BRAZIL UZBEKISTAN . CORRIDOR
About the Trade House

A Bridge Between Latin America and Central Asia

Our Board

Leadership Across Two Continents

On-the-ground teams in São Paulo and Tashkent — connecting verified suppliers with buyers across the Brazil–Uzbekistan corridor.

Carlos Mendes — Brazil Trade Director

Carlos Mendes

Brazil Trade Director — São Paulo
Dilshod Karimov — Uzbekistan Trade Director

Dilshod Karimov

Uzbekistan Trade Director — Tashkent
Ana Ribeiro — Head of Logistics

Ana Ribeiro

Head of Logistics & Transit
Nilufar Yusupova — Trade Compliance Lead

Nilufar Yusupova

Trade Compliance & Certification
What We Do

End-to-End Corridor Services

From supplier verification to customs clearance and last-mile delivery —
one counterparty for the full Brazil–Uzbekistan trade journey.

Sourcing & Verification

Verified suppliers, quality checks, and product matching aligned with import requirements on both sides of the corridor.

Trade Operations

Contracts, export documentation, phytosanitary and halal certification, and compliance handled end to end.

Logistics & Customs

Multimodal routes, ocean and rail freight, warehousing, and customs clearance at every node on the corridor.

Market Entry Support

Partner introductions, market intelligence, and long-term relationship building for importers, exporters, and investors.

Our Corridor

Two Markets, One Trade House

World map showing the Brazil-Uzbekistan trade corridor
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

A freight forwarder moves cargo. A trade house sources the product, verifies the supplier, structures the contract, manages documentation and compliance, coordinates logistics, and remains your single counterparty from origin to destination.
Agriculture and grains, coffee and sugar, halal meat, textiles and cotton, fertilizers and chemicals, minerals, industrial machinery, and processed foods. See our Trade Opportunities page for the full bilateral flow list.
Transit times depend on route and mode — ocean plus rail via the Caspian or Black Sea corridors typically runs 35–55 days door to door. We provide a detailed timeline with every quotation.
Yes. We work with SIF-registered Brazilian plants and halal certification bodies recognized across Muslim markets, and manage phytosanitary certificates, bills of lading, certificates of origin, and all export paperwork.
Absolutely. We facilitate Brazil→Uzbekistan exports (meat, sugar, coffee, machinery) and Uzbekistan→Brazil exports (cotton, textiles, fertilizers, dried fruits, minerals) with teams on the ground in both capitals.