Ukrainian Grain Exports Banned by Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia

Ukrainian Grain Exports Banned by Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia


Hours after the⁢ European‍ Union ended a temporary ban on exports​ of Ukrainian grain⁣ and other products to five member nations, three of them — Poland, Hungary and Slovakia — defied the bloc and said they⁤ would continue to bar Ukrainian grain from being sold within their ‍borders.

As Ukraine, one of ⁢the world’s⁣ largest grain exporters, has struggled to ship its ‌grain because of Russia’s⁤ invasion, ​the European Union⁢ has opened up to tariff-free ​food imports from the country, a move that had the unintended consequence of undercutting prices in several eastern E.U. ‌member states. As part of a deal meant to protect those countries,‍ the ⁢European Union allowed some grain to​ transit through them, but prohibited domestic sales.

Brussels’ decision ‍to let that deal⁤ expire at midnight on Friday revived an issue that has threatened European Union unity on support for Ukraine. The Hungarian agriculture minister, Istvan Nagy, announced⁤ an extended ban that would include more products in a ⁤Facebook post early ⁢Saturday morning, saying that “we will protect ​the ‌interests of the farmers.” Poland and Slovakia‌ announced their bans on Friday.

Lawmakers in Bulgaria went in the other‌ direction, agreeing on Thursday to resume imports of Ukrainian agricultural products, ‍The Associated Press reported, saying the ban had cut into tax revenue.

The E.U. ban,​ which was ⁤implemented in May and ​expired at midnight on Friday, covered exports of wheat, maize, rapeseed, and sunflower seeds to Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia.

The ban⁤ was a response to concerns from those nations that a flood of cheap, tariff-free food imports from Ukraine was hurting their⁤ own farmers. All five had​ imposed‌ tight restrictions on imports of Ukrainian grain before ‍the E.U. ban came into ​effect,⁣ frustrating officials in Brussels and Kyiv.

The pushback against​ Ukrainian grain imports‌ from Europe’s formerly communist eastern lands was a‍ rare, and ⁤awkward, note of discord on the continent‌ after remarkable European support for Ukraine’s war effort for more than a year after the full-scale invasion of February ‍2022.

They‍ are the ‌latest wrinkle in a long list of ⁣Ukraine’s⁢ grain woes, as fighting has raged around Ukraine’s agricultural heartland⁢ and after a huge explosion at the Kakhovka ‌dam caused⁤ epic floods downstream and a punishing drought upstream.

This ‍summer, Russia abandoned a deal that allowed Ukraine to safely ship tens of millions of tons​ or grain via the Black Sea despite the fighting, raising renewed concerns about a global food crisis. The Russian military has ⁢since specifically ‍targeted grain​ warehouses and port infrastructure around the Black Sea. Dozens of facilities have been destroyed, Ukrainian officials have⁤ said, by Russian assault drones.

It was not immediately clear early Saturday how the rapid sequence ‍of developments on⁢ Ukrainian agricultural exports to ‍Europe would affect markets in Ukraine, Eastern Europe⁢ or beyond.

The European Commission, the E.U….

2023-09-16 ⁣05:32:39
Article from www.nytimes.com
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