Agriculture
Trade in agricultural products: €39.2 billion surplus
In 2024, the EU exported €234.1 billion worth of agricultural products and imported €194.9 billion, generating a €39.2 billion surplus. Compared with 2023, both exports and imports registered year-on-year increases of 2.8% and 6.7%, respectively.
Between 2014 and 2024, EU trade in agricultural products grew by 59.0%, with exports rising by 58.0% and imports by 60.2%, equivalent to an average annual growth of 4.7% for exports and 4.8% for imports.
Source dataset: ds-045409
The United Kingdom: Main trade partner
The United Kingdom was the main partner for exports of agricultural goods in 2024 with a 23.0% share (€54.0 billion), followed by the United States (12.8%; €30.1 billion), Switzerland (5.4%; €12.6 billion) and China (5.3%; 12.3 billion).
Most of the EU imports originated from Brazil (8.8%, €17.1 billion), the United Kingdom (8.5%; €16.6 billion), Ukraine (6.7%; 13.1 billion) and the United States (6.1%; 12.0 billion).
Source dataset: ds-045409
For more information
- Statistics Explained article on extra-EU trade in agricultural goods
- Thematic section on international trade of goods
- Database on international trade of goods
Methodological notes
- In this news article, agricultural products relate to 4 major groups: animal products (World Customs Organization Harmonized System (HS) chapters 1-5), vegetable products (HS chapters 6-14), animal or vegetable oils, fats and related products (HS chapter 15) and foodstuffs, beverages and tobacco (HS chapters 16-24).
- As of January 2021 onwards, data on trade with the United Kingdom is based on a mixed concept. In application of the Withdrawal Agreement Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland, for trade with Northern Ireland the statistical concepts applicable are the same as those for trade between EU countries, while for trade with the United Kingdom (excluding Northern Ireland) the same statistical concepts are applicable as for trade with any other extra-EU partner country. For these reasons, data on trade with the United Kingdom are not fully comparable with data on trade with other extra-EU trade partners, and for reference periods before and after the end of 2020.
Share this article:
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
-
Sport3 days agoWho will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain
-
Russia5 days agoWestern investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist
-
Green Week5 days agoEU green jobs: Which activities employ the most people?
-
EU5 days agoGovernment gross debt of eurozone largely in euro
