Radioactive elements, isotopes and compounds; other alloys, dispersions (including cermets), ceramic products and mixtures containing these elements, isotopes or compounds

284443 (Harmonized System 2022 for 6-digit)

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Overview This page contains the latest trade data of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes. In 2022, Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were the world's 1717th most traded product, with a total trade of $1.73B.

Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes are a part of Radioactive Chemicals.

Exports In 2022 the top exporters of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes  were Canada ($576M), Netherlands ($314M), United States ($183M), Germany ($172M), and Belgium ($82.8M).

Imports In 2022 the top importers of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were United States ($714M), Canada ($98.1M), Italy ($85.6M), Germany ($85.2M), and United Kingdom ($73.1M).

Ranking Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes ranks 1768th in the Product Complexity Index (PCI).

Latest Data

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Flow
Y-AXIS SCALE

The following visualization shows the latest trends on Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes. Countries are shown based on data availability.

For a full breakdown of trade patterns, visit the trend explorer or the product in country profile.

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* Trade values are converted to USD using each month's exchange rate. For December 2023 data, the exchange rate from December 30, 2023 is used.

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Historical Data

Exporters and Importers

Top Origin (2022)Canada$576M
Top Destination (2022)United States$714M

In 2022 Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were the world's 1717th most traded product (out of 5,606).

In 2022, the top exporters of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were Canada ($576M), Netherlands ($314M), United States ($183M), Germany ($172M), and Belgium ($82.8M).

In 2022, the top importers of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were United States ($714M), Canada ($98.1M), Italy ($85.6M), Germany ($85.2M), and United Kingdom ($73.1M).

Explore Visualizations

Exporters of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes (2022)
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Importers of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes (2022)
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Market Dynamics

Color
Top Origin Growth (false -  2022)Canada$576M
Top Destination Growth (false -  2022)United States$714M

Between false and 2022, the exports of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes grew the fastest in Canada ($576M), Netherlands ($314M), United States ($183M), Germany ($172M), and Belgium ($82.8M).

Between false and 2022, the fastest growing importers of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were United States ($714M), Canada ($98.1M), Italy ($85.6M), Germany ($85.2M), and United Kingdom ($73.1M).

Explore Visualizations

Exporters of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes (NaN - 2022)

Importers of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes (NaN - 2022)

Net Trade

TOP NET EXPORTER (2022)Canada$478M
TOP NET IMPORTER (2022)United States$532M

This map shows which countries export or import more of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes. Each country is colored based on the difference in exports and imports of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes during 2022.

In 2022, the countries that had a largest trade value in exports than in imports of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were Canada ($478M), Netherlands ($279M), Germany ($86.8M), Russia ($78.8M), and Belgium ($44.1M).

In 2022, the countries that had a largest trade value in imports than in exports of Other radioactive products: alloys, ceramics, and mixtures with isotopes were United States ($532M), Italy ($66.4M), Japan ($64.5M), China ($52.6M), and United Kingdom ($50.2M).

Net Trade (2022)

Product Complexity

Diversification Frontier

Specialization

The Complexity-Relatedness diagram compares the risk and the strategic value of a product's potential export opportunities. Relatedness is predictive of the probability that a country increases its exports in a product. Complexity, is associated with higher levels of income, economic growth potential, lower income inequality, and lower emissions.

Relatedness vs Country Complexity (2022)

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