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Commodity Import Guides

Importing Shea Butter from West Africa — Sourcing and Compliance

Shea butter is a $3.1 billion global market growing at 8.2% CAGR. Over 16 million West African women are part of the supply chain. Here is what EU, US, and Asian buyers need to know before placing their first order.

$3.1BGlobal shea butter
market 2025
8.2%CAGR through
2035
16MWomen in West Africa
shea supply chain
Grade A/B/CKey quality
grades
Commodity Import Guides11 min readUpdated March 2026

West Africa supplies virtually all of the world's commercial shea nuts. Burkina Faso, Mali, Ghana, Nigeria, and Côte d'Ivoire collectively account for more than 70 percent of global shea nut production, and West Africa as a whole supplies approximately 60 percent of global output. The shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa) grows naturally across a belt spanning 21 countries from Senegal to Ethiopia — the "Shea Belt" — but the highest quality and largest volumes come from the Sahelian west.

For EU cosmetics manufacturers, chocolate and confectionery producers, and pharmaceutical ingredient buyers, shea butter is a strategically important raw material. More than 80 percent of global shea butter sales are linked to cosmetics and personal care. Shea butter's high concentration of fatty acids and vitamins makes it a uniquely versatile ingredient — simultaneously valued as a premium skin moisturiser and as a cocoa butter equivalent (CBE) in chocolate production.

Key Takeaways
  • Global shea butter market: $3.1 billion in 2025, projected to reach $6.8 billion by 2035 at 8.2% CAGR
  • West Africa dominates production — Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria, Côte d'Ivoire are the five key origins
  • Two product categories: unrefined (raw) shea butter (Grade A) and refined shea butter — different applications, different buyers
  • Organic certification (EU Organic, COSMOS) and Fairtrade/Fair for Life certification significantly increase EU market access and pricing
  • Raw shea nut export bans: Burkina Faso and Nigeria have banned raw nut exports; Ghana plans 2026 ban — affects supply chain structure
  • Key EU buyers: AAK, Bunge Loders Croklaan, Fuji Oil, BASF, Croda, Clariant, Olvea — most have vertically integrated West African sourcing
  • For smaller buyers: cooperatives and women-led processors in Ghana and Burkina Faso offer direct sourcing with ethical and sustainability credentials

Shea Butter Grades and Product Forms — What You Are Actually Buying

The shea butter market is not a single commodity. It encompasses multiple product forms that serve completely different applications and buyer profiles. Understanding which form you need before sourcing is essential — the price and supply chain for each form are fundamentally different.

Product FormDescriptionApplicationApprox. FOB PriceQuality Indicator
Grade A — Unrefined (Raw)Extracted without chemicals, ivory to pale yellow colour, natural scent. Also called "African shea butter" or "women's shea butter"Premium cosmetics, natural skincare, clean beauty brands. The body shop, L'Occitane$1.50–$4.00/kg FOB (conventional)
$4.00–$10.00/kg organic/Fairtrade
FFA below 3%, IV 52–66, SV 175–200
Grade B — RefinedChemically refined using hexane solvent extraction, bleaching, and deodorisation. White colour, neutral scentMass-market cosmetics, food processing, CBE (cocoa butter equivalent) for chocolate$1.00–$2.50/kg FOBFFA below 0.5%, colour white, neutral odour
Shea StearinHard fraction of shea butter obtained by fractionationChocolate CBE, confectionery, pharmaceuticals$1.20–$2.80/kgHigh stearic acid content for tempering
Shea OleinLiquid fraction of shea butter from fractionationCosmetic oils, food industry$0.80–$1.80/kgHigh oleic acid content
Nilotica Shea ButterFrom Vitellaria nilotica (East Africa — Uganda, South Sudan). Different chemical profile: softer texture, higher oleic acidPremium cosmetics, specialty skincare formulations$5.00–$15.00/kgEmerging market; CBI reports growing EU interest

The West African Shea Producing Countries — What Buyers Need to Know

Ghana is the most internationally connected West African shea origin for EU cosmetics and Fairtrade buyers. Ghana has a well-developed women's cooperative infrastructure, a significant community of EU-engaged processors, and the strongest Fairtrade and organic certification base of any West African origin. The Body Shop's Community Fair Trade programme has sourced from Ghana since the 1990s. Ghana plans to implement a raw shea nut export ban in 2026, following Burkina Faso and Nigeria — which will further push processing and value addition into Ghana domestically. FOB prices from Ghana for Grade A unrefined shea: $1.50–$3.50/kg (conventional) to $4.00–$9.00/kg (organic or Fairtrade certified).

Burkina Faso already has a raw nut export ban in place, meaning all shea leaves Burkina Faso as processed butter. The country has significant cooperative processing infrastructure. Some EU buyers source directly from women's cooperative processors in Burkina Faso for premium unrefined butter. The security situation in parts of Burkina Faso creates logistics complexity — buyers typically work through Accra or Lomé as consolidation points.

Nigeria is the largest shea producer by geographic area but has historically exported primarily in raw nut form to Asia. With the raw nut export ban now in place, domestic processing capacity is growing. Nigeria's ambition is $3 billion in shea export revenue by 2027. Quality and certification standards for international markets are less developed than Ghana and Burkina Faso, but large industrial buyers (AAK, Bunge) have established direct sourcing operations.

Certifications EU Buyers Require for Shea Butter

CertificationWhat It CoversMarket Access ImpactCost Level
EU Organic (2018/848) + COSMOS OrganicOrganic cultivation and processing; COSMOS adds additional cosmetic ingredient standardsEU natural and organic cosmetics, health food retailers, premium brandsModerate — CB inspection + annual fee
Fairtrade InternationalMinimum price guarantee, Fairtrade premium for community investment, cooperative standardsFairtrade-committed EU and UK retailers; Body Shop, Lush, The Co-opModerate — certification fee + Fairtrade premium payment
Fair for Life (FFL)Social responsibility and fair trade standard for supply chain, combining organic and fair trade in one auditEU natural cosmetics, especially Germany (Bio Company, dm, Rossmann)Moderate
RSPO (for mixed origin/blended)Not directly applicable to shea but required if buyer's product also contains palm — some EU buyers require supply chain sustainability proofFMCG cosmetics with complex ingredient decksLow direct cost for shea suppliers specifically
HACCP / ISO 22000Food safety management system for processing facilityFood-grade shea (CBE, confectionery) requires this — not optional for food-grade applicationsModerate for processing facility

Supply Chain Structure — How Shea Butter Moves from Tree to EU Buyer

The shea supply chain has historically been long and fragmented, involving individual women collectors, local aggregators, regional traders, and processing companies before product reaches the EU importer. Understanding this structure helps buyers assess sourcing risk and traceability capability.

The traditional supply chain: Women collectors → village aggregators → regional traders → processing company (butter or refined oil) → international exporter → EU importer/distributor. Each hand-off adds time, cost, and traceability complexity. The rise of large buyers like China and India establishing pre-purchase agreements directly with aggregators in 2024–2025 has intensified competition for quality shea nuts and squeezed smaller EU-bound processors out of supply at certain periods.

The most traceable and ethically documented supply chain model for EU buyers is direct sourcing from women's cooperative processors — organisations that consolidate collection from member women, process the butter collectively, and export directly. Companies like Savannah Fruits Company and various ECOCERT-certified cooperatives in Ghana and Burkina Faso represent this model. EU buyers pay a premium for this traceable, certified supply, but receive full supply chain documentation and social compliance credentials that large FMCG brands increasingly require.

Documentation Required for Importing Shea Butter to the EU

DocumentPurposeWho IssuesNotes
Commercial InvoiceValue declaration; HS code 1516 20 for refined shea butter; 1515 90 for unrefinedExporterConfirm correct HS code for customs — impacts tariff rate
Certificate of OriginPreferential GSP or EPA duty rate for EU importsExporting country chamber of commerce or customsRequired for duty reduction — West African countries generally qualify for EU GSP
Phytosanitary CertificateFor shea nuts in shell; typically not required for processed butterNational plant protection authorityCheck if required by EU for specific form being imported
Organic Certificate + COI via TRACESFor organic shea — required per shipmentECOCERT or other EU-approved CBCOI must be issued via TRACES NT before EU customs clearance
Fairtrade Transaction CertificateConfirms the specific lot was sourced through Fairtrade-certified supply chainFairtrade International or licensed CBRequired per shipment if marketing as Fairtrade
Analysis Certificate (CoA)FFA content, moisture, peroxide value, colour, IV, SV — confirms grade specificationAccredited lab or processor QCEssential for every shipment — specification verification

What to Ask a West African Shea Butter Supplier Before Ordering

Before placing a first commercial order, EU and international buyers should clarify these specifics with any West African shea butter supplier.

What processing method do you use — traditional cold-press or mechanical hot-press extraction? Do you use hexane or other chemical solvents at any stage? What certifications does your processing facility hold — organic, Fairtrade, HACCP? Can you provide the analysis certificate (CoA) for your most recent production batch, showing FFA percentage, moisture, peroxide value, and colour? Where exactly are your raw nuts sourced — which region and country — and can you provide supply chain documentation back to the cooperative or collection point level? What is your minimum order quantity per delivery, and what packaging options are available (drums, IBC, bags)? What are your payment terms and export logistics experience for EU destinations?

Frequently Asked Questions

Raw or unrefined shea butter (Grade A) is extracted through traditional or mechanical methods without chemical solvents. It retains its natural ivory-to-yellow colour, characteristic nutty scent, and full fat-soluble vitamin content. It commands the highest prices and is preferred by premium natural cosmetics brands, clean beauty products, and direct-to-consumer natural skincare. Refined shea butter is processed using hexane extraction and then bleached and deodorised to produce a white, neutral-scented product. It is cheaper per kg, used in mass-market cosmetics, and widely used as a cocoa butter equivalent (CBE) in chocolate and confectionery manufacturing. The appropriate grade depends entirely on your application.
For EU cosmetics buyers requiring certified organic or Fairtrade shea, Ghana has the most developed certification infrastructure and the strongest cooperative processing base with EU market experience. Burkina Faso is a strong second choice with a mandatory processing-before-export policy. For large-volume buyers sourcing refined shea for food or mass-market cosmetics, Nigeria and Mali offer competitive pricing and volume. The best country depends on your volume requirements, quality grade, certification needs, and logistics preference.
EU cosmetics buyers typically require EU Organic (Regulation 2018/848) plus COSMOS Organic certification for natural cosmetics applications. Fairtrade International certification is required for Fairtrade-positioned products. For food-grade shea (CBE use), HACCP and ISO 22000 for the processing facility are standard. For sustainability-positioned brands, Fair for Life (FFL) and organic combined certification is increasingly requested. Always confirm specific certification requirements with your buyer before contracting supply.
Unrefined (Grade A) shea butter FOB West Africa costs approximately $1.50–$4.00 per kg for conventional and $4.00–$10.00 per kg for organic or Fairtrade certified. Refined shea butter is cheaper at approximately $1.00–$2.50 per kg FOB. Premium nilotica shea butter from East Africa (Uganda) commands significantly higher prices — $5.00–$15.00 per kg for specialty cosmetic grade. Prices fluctuate based on harvest conditions, Chinese and Indian buyer competition for raw nuts, and currency movements.
Burkina Faso and Nigeria have implemented bans on raw shea nut exports to push processing value-addition into local economies. Ghana plans a similar ban in 2026. For EU buyers, this means the supply chain structure is shifting — more processing now happens in West Africa before export, which increases traceability and quality consistency for buyers willing to work directly with certified West African processors. It may also create short-term supply tightness as domestic processing capacity catches up with demand. The longer-term effect is likely to be positive for supply chain quality and traceability.

Sourcing West African Shea Butter?

ExportReady.africa covers African commodity import guides for EU cosmetics, food, and pharmaceutical buyers. Find verified West African shea processors in our supplier directory.