En590, jet fuel a1, petroleum, oil, gasoil, gasoil, crude oil, copper cathode, aluminum billets, used rails, aluminum ingots, copper, copper wire scrap 99.99%, steel, quartz, diesel, jet fuel, d6, bitumen, lng, petroleum coke, coal, cement, fertilizers, urea 46, npk, sulfur, euro pallets, wooden pallets, tomato paste, frozen potatoes, frozen french fries, mangoes, cashew, frozen chicken, frozen fish,sugar icumsa 45, sugar, salt, saffron, rice, beet pellets, beet molasses, herbs & spices, milk, frozen & fresh strawberries, frozen & fresh fruits, frozen & fresh vegetables, pvc scrap, coltan, aluminum ingot a7, onion, apple, gala apple, pomegranates, orange, rice, soybeans, sesame, fertilizer, chicken paws, banana, diesel en590 10ppm, urea granular 46%, beans, Aluminum Ingots a7, vanilla, dried fruits, ginger, petroleum product, yellow corn, maize, melon, watermelon, honey, yam, cacao, cooking oil, whole chicken..
Handicraft- home furniture- agro products.
Textiles, garments, fish, iron scrap, handicraft.
Metal scrap.
Hms1, 2.
Cashew nut, scrap metal.
Alluvial metal, metal scraps, gem stones, cashew nuts and palm.
Metal scrap , cashew nuts , fishing products.
Metal scrap, aluminum scrap, used rail HMS 1 & 2.
Scrap batteries, rails, steel scrap, remelted lead ingots.
Scrap like metal scrap, zinc scrap, iron scrap, used rail HMS 1 & 2, scrap car , scrap battery.
Precious minerals.
Precious minerals.
Steel scrap, ferrous scrap.
Copper scrap, aluminium scrap, lead scrap, zinc scrap, hms, steel scrap.
Frozen sea foods - squid, cuttlefish (whole, cleaned, fillets, strips, wings, tentacles), shrimps (white, black tiger, pink/brown, head-on, headless, pud, pd, tailon), lobster, crab, fish.
Scrap iron, old rail, heavy bus and truck old materials.Dealer, buying agent
Seafood, scrap iron, timber, mining.Commission agent
Peanut, (Arachis hypogaea), also called groundnut, earthnut, or goober, legume of the pea family (Fabaceae), grown for its edible seeds. Native to tropical South America, the peanut was at an early time introduced to the Old World tropics. The seeds are a nutritionally dense food, rich in protein and fat. Despite its several common names, the peanut is not a true nut. As with other legumes, the plant adds nitrogen to the soil by means of nitrogen-fixing bacteria and is thus particularly valuable as a soil-enriching crop.