Manufacturing Dynamics in Türkiye’s Pulse Sector
Turkey (Türkiye) remains a globally influential player in the Pulses Trade, specifically for Lentils, Chickpeas, and Beans. Leveraging its strategic location and advanced processing capacity, Turkey functions as a vital Sourcing and Re-Export hub, particularly for the Middle East, North Africa, and the European Union. However, local production is being challenged by adverse climate and shifting governmental policies.
Production and Exports Data
Local production is highly volatile due to changing weather and farmer incentives.
- Red Lentils: Production for 2025 is forecast to slump by 16 percent from 2024 figures (from 405,000 MT to 340,000 MT), due primarily to dry weather in regions outside of Southeastern Anatolia. This decline means the domestic market has virtually no carry-over stocks, pressuring prices upward.
- Chickpeas: Production is forecast at 605,000 MT in 2025. While the overall global market is currently steady, Turkish Exports of chickpeas are highly active, targeting strong demand from the Middle East and China.
- White Beans: Production for the 2025 harvest dropped sharply, leading the government to impose an export ban on white beans (and green lentils) to protect domestic supply and stabilize prices. This policy affects the Trade landscape significantly.
The pulse sector’s strength largely stems from its highly developed processing and packaging Manufacturing. Turkey’s Suppliers are leaders in the value-added segment, transforming both domestic and imported raw materials into consumer-ready goods.
Trade Policy and Sourcing Complexity
Turkey / Türkiye relies on a dual Trade strategy to maintain its export volume: utilizing its own crops and leveraging the Inward Processing Regime (IPR), which allows zero-tariff imports of raw pulses for processing and re-export.
- Re-Export Hub: Turkey primarily imports large volumes of red lentils from major global Suppliers like Canada, Kazakhstan, and Russia. These are then processed and re-exported, making Türkiye a crucial bottleneck in the global Supply Chain. Iraq, Sudan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia are the main pulse Exportmarkets.
- Policy Volatility: Government intervention, such as the imposition and potential lifting of export quotas and bans on certain pulses, creates significant uncertainty for international buyers. This policy risk must be actively managed by Sourcing partners. The ongoing Red Sea crisis adds approximately 50 dollars per metric ton to Logistics costs for imports and Exports, further squeezing profit margins.
Investment in Value and Sustainability
The future competitive edge for Turkey’s pulse industry lies in upgrading its Manufacturing capabilities, moving towards contract farming, and embracing sustainability.
- Value-Added Processing: Investment is flowing into modern pulse cleaning, sorting, and packaging facilities (often supported by local development agencies) to enhance quality, reduce foreign materials, and produce high-value goods like roasted chickpeas and pulse flours.
- Contract Agriculture: The drive towards contract farming aims to reduce farmers’ exposure to price fluctuations, ensuring a more stable and predictable domestic supply for Suppliers (Internal Link: Turkey Solidifies Agro-Food Powerhouse Status).
- Green Investment: Leading Suppliers are investing in renewable energy (solar and biogas) for their Manufacturing operations, aligning the sector with the European Green Deal and improving the long-term sustainability of the entire Economy (Internal Link: Food FDI: Premier Processing Plants).
Next Steps for Global Buyers
For global food distributors and humanitarian aid organizations, Turkey / Türkiye remains a high-volume, high-quality Sourcing partner for processed Pulses. Navigating its complex Trade policies and managing climate risk are key to securing consistent supply.
To receive a detailed analysis of the Turkish pulse market, guidance on navigating export quotas, and direct access to reliable Suppliers and processing Investment opportunities, contact the experts at Burc Consulting.








































