Thailand’s 2025 rice exports top target at 7.9m tonnes
Thailand exported 7.9 million tonnes of rice in 2025, exceeding its 7.5 million tonne target, supported by strong parboiled and jasmine rice shipments. However, intense global price competition is expected to persist, with 2026 rice exports forecast to decline to 7 million tonnes.
Thailand exported 7.9m tonnes of rice in 2025, topping its target. DFT chief Arada Fueangthong sees tough competition in 2026, with exports forecast at 7m tonnes.
Thailand beats 2025 rice export target
Thailand exported 7.9 million tonnes of rice in 2025, exceeding its target of 7.5 million tonnes, with shipments valued at 148,204 million baht (about US$4,515 million), Arada Fueangthong, director-general of the Department of Foreign Trade (DFT) at the Ministry of Commerce, said.
White rice still leads, but volumes fall
Arada said the top export category was white rice, with 3.62 million tonnes, accounting for 45.82% of Thailand’s total rice exports, though volume was down 39.87% year on year.
Other major categories were:
- Thai Hom Mali (jasmine) rice: 1.76 million tonnes (up 0.57%)
- Parboiled rice: 1.51 million tonnes (up 18.90%)
- Thai fragrant rice: 0.59 million tonnes (down 6.35%)
- Glutinous rice: 0.33 million tonnes (up 10%)
- Brown rice: 0.09 million tonnes (up 200%)
She said exports rose across most categories, except white rice and Thai fragrant rice, which declined amid intense price competition from key exporters including Vietnam, India and Pakistan.
Iraq, South Africa and the US among top markets
Arada said Thailand’s key export markets in 2025 included:
- Iraq: 1.00 million tonnes (up 0.41%)
- South Africa: 0.88 million tonnes (up 5.11%)
- United States: 0.82 million tonnes (down 3.60%)
- China: 0.65 million tonnes (up 48.95%)
- Senegal: 0.29 million tonnes (down 41.10%)
2026 outlook: fierce price competition, 7m-tonne forecast
Arada said 2026 would remain challenging, with market conditions expected to be similar to 2025 and price competition staying intense.
Based on a joint assessment with the private sector and the Thai Rice Exporters Association, she said global competition was likely to remain high as world rice output increases, while import demand from major partners such as Indonesia could fall sharply due to its food self-sufficiency policy.
She added that Thai exports could also face headwinds from the global economy, baht strength and volatility, and geopolitical tensions that may push up freight costs.
Still, she noted that geopolitical risks could also prompt some importing countries to build up stockpiles to bolster food security—creating potential opportunities for Thai exporters. Thailand’s rice exports in 2026 are forecast at 7 million tonnes, she said.
DFT to push orders, expand premium markets and G2G deals
Arada said the DFT had prepared a plan to support rice exports and secure orders to absorb Thai output, working with the private sector to protect existing markets and expand in high-potential ones.
The department plans to send trade delegations to strengthen ties and build confidence with major importers such as Japan, China, the United States, Canada and South Africa, to deepen trade cooperation and boost export opportunities.
She said the DFT would also continue to pursue government-to-government (G2G) rice sales with China and Singapore, while expanding premium rice markets in countries such as Germany, Switzerland and the United States.
The department will further promote Thai rice through international trade fairs—linking smaller operators with importers for business matching—and step up online promotion to broaden awareness and stimulate demand, including among younger consumers.
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Source : Nation Thailand