A high-resolution, cinematic wide shot of a massive bulk carrier cargo ship being loaded with golden sunflower seeds at a modern Argentine port terminal during golden hour

Argentina Sunflower Exports Surge, Reshaping Supply

  • Surging exports: Argentina shipped 620,000 tonnes of sunflower seeds since January 2026 versus just 11,000 tonnes a year earlier, reshaping European supply.
  • Stronger processing flows: March sunflower oil and meal exports rose 47% and 49% year-on-year, highlighting robust crush margins and capacity use.
  • Harvest ahead of schedule: 5.1 million tonnes collected by March 31 versus 3.5 million tonnes in 2025, supporting a crop forecast above 6.5 million tonnes.
  • Pressure on Black Sea seeds: Increased Argentine arrivals in Bulgaria and Romania are bearish for Black Sea sunflower seed prices amid stiffer competition.
  • Neutral-to-bullish for oil/meal: Higher regional crushing from imported seeds may tighten local seed availability while boosting sunflower oil and meal exports.

Argentina’s Sunflower Export Surge

Argentina has rapidly emerged as a major supplier of sunflower seeds to Europe in early 2026. According to Oil World, the country exported 620,000 tonnes of sunflower seeds from January through March, a dramatic increase from just 11,000 tonnes during the same period in 2025. March alone accounted for 202,000 tonnes, reflecting aggressive early-season selling following a robust harvest.

Key Destinations and Trade Flows

European Black Sea processors have absorbed the bulk of Argentine sunflower seed exports, with Bulgaria and Romania emerging as primary buyers. Additional flows into Portugal, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Turkey underscore a broad-based reshaping of European sunflower seed supply chains. Market reports also point to potential cargo diversions from Turkey back into Romania, further reinforcing regional availability for crushers.

Destination Argentine Sunflower Seed Imports (tonnes) Notes
Bulgaria 283,000 Largest European buyer; key Black Sea crushing hub
Romania 77,000 Major processor; also linked to cargo diversions from Turkey
Turkey ≈100,000 Some cargoes reportedly diverted to Romania
Portugal 53,000 Growing role in Iberian processing
France 22,000 Supplementing domestic seed availability
Spain 20,000 Supports crush and feed demand
Netherlands 20,000 Logistics and trading hub
Total (Jan–Mar 2026) 620,000 Up sharply from 11,000 tonnes in Jan–Mar 2025

Processed Products: Oil and Meal

Processed sunflower products also recorded strong export growth in March 2026. Sunflower oil shipments rose to 175,000 tonnes from 119,000 tonnes a year earlier, while sunflower meal exports increased to 174,000 tonnes versus 117,000 tonnes in March 2025. The jump in volumes reflects both abundant seed availability and competitive crush margins, with Argentina capitalizing on robust domestic processing capacity.

Product Exports March 2025 (tonnes) Exports March 2026 (tonnes) Year-on-Year Change
Sunflower Seeds (Jan–Mar total) 11,000 620,000 +609,000 tonnes
Sunflower Oil (March) 119,000 175,000 +47%
Sunflower Meal (March) 117,000 174,000 +49%

Harvest Progress and Production Outlook

Argentina’s 2026 sunflower harvest is expected to exceed 6.5 million tonnes, underpinned by exceptional yields and accelerated fieldwork. By March 31, farmers had collected 5.1 million tonnes, well ahead of the 3.5 million tonnes harvested by the same date in 2025. This front-loaded harvest pace has enabled early export availability and supported the surge in both seed and product shipments.

Harvest Metric 2025 2026 Comment
Harvested by March 31 (tonnes) 3.5 million 5.1 million Significant acceleration year-on-year
Full-season Harvest Forecast (tonnes) n/a >6.5 million Supports sustained export potential

Price Impact and Market Sentiment

The influx of Argentine sunflower seeds into Bulgaria, Romania, and surrounding markets is bearish for Black Sea sunflower seed prices. Additional seed availability increases regional crushing capacity utilization and intensifies competition for European buyers, particularly versus Ukrainian and Russian origins. However, the implications for sunflower oil and meal differ.

As European processors increase crush rates on imported Argentine seeds, local seed supplies could tighten relative to processing demand, lending neutral-to-bullish support for Black Sea sunflower oil and meal. Higher derivative output from both Argentina and European crushers enhances exportable supplies, but persistent demand for vegetable oils and protein meals should help absorb incremental volumes.

Source: Market Data


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