How does central Europe's ban impact Ukrainian grain exports?
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[August 07, 2023]
By Luiza Ilie and Marek Strzelecki
BUCHAREST/WARSAW (Reuters) - Ukraine has become entirely dependent on
alternative European Union routes for its grain exports after Russia
last month exited a year-long deal that had allowed them to be shipped
safely via its Black Sea ports.
This has exacerbated Brussels' efforts to find a balance between helping
Ukraine with the demand of five eastern EU member states to protect
their own markets by extending a ban on domestic sales of Ukrainian
grain till at least the end of 2023.
A current deal to protect farmers in the five states near to Ukraine -
Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia - is due to expire on
Sept. 15.
Russian attacks against Ukraine's inland port infrastructure on the
river Danube – its last waterborne export route – in the weeks since the
collapse of the Black Sea deal have piled further pressure on the EU to
allow proximity grain sales again.
Here are details on how the temporary ban in the five CEE states has
affected sales of Ukrainian grain and its transit to other destinations.
WHY DID UKRAINIAN GRAIN INFLOWS RISE IN CEE?
Ukrainian grain is exempt from EU customs duties, which has made it
cheaper than local production.
Ukraine's proximity and high logistics costs drove an unprecedented
surge in its grain exports into the five states in 2022 and early 2023,
creating sales disruptions, squeezing out regional crops from domestic
and some export markets, depressing prices and prompting farmers'
protests.
Poland's grain imports rose nearly three-fold in 2022 to 3.27 million
tons, of which 75% was Ukrainian grain, mostly corn and wheat. High
imports continued until March 2023. Romania, one of the EU's biggest
grain exporters in its own right, saw 3.2 million tons of Ukrainian
grain and oilseeds remain within its borders by May, the agriculture
ministry said. Its imports before the start of the war were negligible.
Cezar Gheorghe of Romanian grain market consultancy AGRIColumn, who
placed Ukrainian grain sales at around 4.7 million tons, said imports
continued even after the ban was enforced under the guise of existing
contracts.
Hungary imported up to 50,000 tons of grains and oilseeds annually from
Ukraine before the war. The flow spiked to 2.5 million tons of grains
and oilseeds in 2022. In 2023 it was up to 300,000 tons until the import
ban was put in place. In Slovakia, imports of Ukrainian grain rose to
339,000 tons in the second half of 2022, an almost 10-fold increase
versus the first half of the year, official data showed.
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An employee checks the temperature of
the corn in a farm, in Timar, Hungary, April 19, 2023. REUTERS/Bernadett
Szabo/File Photo
WHAT HAPPENED AFTER THE IMPORT BAN?
In April, Poland and Hungary unilaterally closed their borders to
imports of Ukrainian grain and other food. Romania, Ukraine's
biggest alternative transit route, stopped short of a ban but
started sealing transports. In May, the EU allowed five states -
Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia all border Ukraine, while
Bulgaria lies south of the Danube - to ban domestic sales of
Ukrainian wheat, maize and oilseeds till June 5 - later extended to
Sept. 15 - while still allowing transit through them for onward
export.
After the ban, transit surged. Transit of wheat from Ukraine via
Poland jumped to over 90,000 tons in June from between 43,000-51,000
a month in the first quarter of this year. Transit of corn increased
to 170,000 tons in June from about 50,000-70,000 tons a month in the
first quarter of this year, the Polish agriculture ministry said.
Romania has shipped about a third of Ukraine's grain exports since
the start of the war through its Black Sea port of Constanta – 8.6
million tons in 2022, and 7.5 million tons in the first half of this
year.
Volumes increased in May and June, particularly via barges on the
Danube from Ukraine's river ports.
HOW WILL BRUSSELS HANDLE EXTENSION REQUEST?
On July 19, the five countries requested the ban to be extended till
at least the end of the year. Brussels will review the ban in early
September, taking into account harvest results, storage capacity,
and the situation in third countries in terms of their access to
grain. Poland, with an election due in October or November, has
already said it will not open its border on Sept. 15, increasing
pressure on Brussels to extend the protective measures.
Meanwhile, Lithuania has asked the European Commission to develop a
route for Ukrainian grain through Baltic ports. The five ports in
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia have a combined grain export capacity
of 25 million tons.
But the key issue will be the economic viability of alternative land
routes, known as "Solidarity Lanes".
Ukraine estimates the extra cost of the EU transit route at $30-40 a
ton. Transiting by land via Poland added 37 euros more per ton than
through Romania's Constanta port, said Viorel Panait, the manager of
port operator Comvex.
(Reporting by Marek Strzelecki and Luiza Ilie; Additional reporting
by Gergerly Szakacs in Budapest and Jason Hovet in Prague; Editing
by Gareth Jones)
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