Wheat, corn and soybean prices all rose on the news, because Black Sea grain deal expired over disagreements between Turkey, Russia, Ukraine & NATO….

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Wheat prices surge after Russia ends grain deal. And it's not good news for the world's food supply​

Published Mon, Jul 17 2023 9:17 AM EDTUpdated Mon, Jul 17 2023 5:23 PM EDT
Russia's withdrawal from a critically important wartime deal that allowed the export of Ukrainian grain across the Black Sea has reignited fears about global food security, with analysts describing the initiative's demise as both an inevitable setback and a blow to markets.
Hours before the agreement's expiry, Russia said Monday that it would not renew the Black Sea Grain Initiative.
The agreement, which was brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July of last year following Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, was a rare diplomatic breakthrough designed to avert a global food crisis.
"Today is the last day of the Grain deal," Kremlin Dmitry Peskov said. "When the respective parts for Russia's benefit are fulfilled, Russia will return to the deal."
The Black Sea Grain Initiative has been repeatedly extended in short increments, amid increasing discontent from Russia over perceived restrictions that limit the full dispatch of its own grain and fertilizer exports.
Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated these complaints over a weekend call with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, saying — according to a Google-translated report from the Kremlin — that the key objective of supplying grain to countries in need, including those on the African continent, had not been achieved.
Wheat, corn and soybean prices all rose on the news. Wheat futures jumped 3% on Monday, hitting a high of 689.25 cents per bushel, its highest level since June 28 when the contract traded as high as 706.25 cents.
Wheat prices remain well below the peak levels of 1,177.5 cents per bushel reached in May of last year, however.
Corn futures soared to a high of 526.5 cents per bushel, while soybean futures surged to a high of 1,388.75 cents per bushel.
Bulk carriers are docked at the grain terminal of the port of Odessa, Ukraine, on April 10, 2023.
Bo Amstrup | Afp | Getty Images
Simon J. Evenett, a specialist in global trade and an economics professor at the University of St. Gallen, said Monday that Russia's withdrawal reflects the "coup de grace on a deal that was on its last legs." He cited U.N. shipping data that showed shipments have been steadily falling year to date.
"The demise of the Black Sea Deal is a blow for the nations sourcing cheaper Ukrainian wheat. So long as this doesn't trigger lots of export bans, the deal's demise is [a] minor disturbance," Evenett said via email.
"Going forward what matters is whether Russia weaponizes its wheat exports," he added. "During the last and current harvest cycle Russia was the world's largest supplier, exporting around 45 million metric tons."
Evenett said market participants should closely monitor the prospect of Moscow imposing an export tax increase given that this would likely raise grain prices further and help the Kremlin to finance its military campaign in Ukraine.

'Upward pressures on food prices'​

Peter Ceretti of Eurasia Group told CNBC that the political risk consultancy does not expect the deal's suspension to trigger a fresh bout of potentially destabilizing global food inflation in the near term.
"Russian shipments of grain will continue, and the deal's demise will not entirely halt Ukrainian shipments via the Black Sea or those through Europe, either," Ceretti said via email.
"Going forward, however, the end of the grain deal will add to other upward pressures on food prices, such as drought in Europe and the onset of El Nino. The markets most affected by the deal's collapse will be states in North Africa and the Levant that import large volumes of grain from the Black Sea region," he added.
Since being signed in July last year, the U.N. says the Black Sea Grain Initiative has allowed more than 32 million metric tons of food commodities to be exported from three Ukrainian Black Sea ports — Odesa, Chornomorsk and Pivdennyi, previously known as Yuzhny — to 45 countries worldwide.
It is for this reason that U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had described the deal as playing an "indispensable role" in global food security.
Guterres said in early July that the agreement "must continue" at a time when conflict, the climate crisis, energy prices and other factors roil the production and affordability of food, while 258 million people face hunger in 58 countries worldwide.
Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with servicemen at the Kremlin in Moscow on June 27, 2023.
Mikhail Tereshchenko | AFP | Getty Images
Carlos Mera, head of agricultural commodities markets at Dutch lender Rabobank, said Monday that while investors had been bracing for a cancellation, Russia's withdrawal was "a blow" to markets.
Mera said the initiative had supported price stability and prevented shortages across the developing world.
"Ukraine will now be forced to export most of its grains and oilseeds through its land borders and Danube ports. This will significantly drive up transportation costs and pile further pressure on Ukrainian farmers' profits," he added.
"The knock-on effect of this is it could prompt them to plant less next season, placing further pressure on supplies going forward."
Ultimately, Mera said the development means low-income countries in Africa and the Middle East will likely become more dependent on Russian wheat — a country that represents more than 20% of global wheat exports.
— CNBC's Ruxandra Iordache contributed to this report.
 
Lmao


Poland told Ukraine their wheat can’t pass thru Poland

Man wtf…
Northern Europe is going to be a desert in a couple of years. I just a notification from Spain, we already know what's going on in Portugal. England is already experiencing high temperatures. And we have Africans fleeing their homes to go there. It's absurd.
 
Northern Europe is going to be a desert in a couple of years. I just a notification from Spain, we already know what's going on in Portugal. England is already experiencing high temperatures. And we have Africans fleeing their homes to go there. It's absurd.
Lol
 

Russia’s exit from grain deal puts focus on Asia’s food prices​

Analysts say food prices in Asia are likely to rise but the fallout will be limited for the time being.​

Amy Chew
Russia's exit from the Black Sea grain deal has raised concerns about global food security [File: Mehmet Emin Caliskan/Reuters]
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal is expected to drive food prices higher in Asia but the impact will be muted for now, analysts say, due to reduced imports from Ukraine and increased supply from other countries.

Under the Black Sea deal, Asia received 46 percent of shipments of grains and other foodstuffs, while Western Europe and Africa took 40 percent and 12 percent, respectively.

China has been the largest single recipient of exports, according to UN figures, taking 7.7 million tonnes or nearly one-quarter of the total. China’s imports included 5.6 million tonnes of corn, 1.8 million tonnes of sunflower seed meal, 370,000 tonnes of sunflower oil and 340,000 tonnes of barley.

“30 percent of China’s corn imports come from Ukraine, and is used for food, cooking oil and animal feed,” Oksana Lesniak, head of the Asia-Pacific Bureau at the Center for Global Studies Strategy XXI in Kyiv, told Al Jazeera.

Pavlo Martyshev, a researcher at the Center for Food and Land Use Research at Kyiv School of Economics, said Asia, including China, would be better placed than regions like Africa to weather the collapse of the deal.

“The end of the grain deal will have an impact on food security in Asia due to rising prices of grains and oilseeds, as well as vegetable oils. This could push up food inflation in the region,” Martyshev told Al Jazeera.

“However, it should be noted that there will not be a physical shortage of food products. Asian countries are financially capable [unlike many African countries], so they will have sufficient food supply.”

Martyshev said China’s policy of diversifying its imports – including a 2022 agreement signed with Brazil to import corn – would ensure food security, as Brazil is currently experiencing exceptionally high harvests.

Ukraine is one of the world’s biggest grain producers [File: Efrem Lukatsky/AP Photo]Still, Martyshev said he expects global grain prices to rise over the coming months due to the collapse of the deal and other factors such as exceptional weather due to climate change.
“Currently, this impact is not noticeable because countries in the northern hemisphere are harvesting new crops, so there will be enough grain for everyone,” he said.

“Additionally, it is expected that there will be a record grain production in the world in 2023. It should be noted that the current large harvest is coincidental, as it is mainly achieved due to relatively favourable weather conditions. At present, the large harvest masks the problems of the food crisis.”

Despite being a beneficiary of the Black Sea grain deal and an ally of Russia, China has not been able to persuade Russia from pulling out of the deal.

“Russia is undermining the Chinese’s authority,” Mark Savchuk, head of the oversight committee of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine, told Al Jazeera.

“China should have been portrayed in this grain deal as a big, influential country that could guarantee something [food supply] for African countries.”

Yose Rizal Damuri, executive director of the Jakarta-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said the fallout in Southeast Asia, where wheat-based noodles account for 10-15 percent of staples, would not be “that significant” as countries had already reduced imports from Ukraine after Russia launched its invasion in February last year.

“That [indirect impact] may be more significant than the direct impact, especially with the El Nino weather cycle that may disrupt harvests in Southeast Asia,” Damuri told Al Jazeera.

Damuri added that in the event that unfavourable weather conditions affect the supply chains of other food commodities, Southeast Asia could still end up with higher inflation.

“That again depends on how it [Black Sea grain deal] affects the global food supply chain,” Damuri said.

Kyiv has painted the collapse of the deal in comparatively dire terms.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has warned that Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal endangers the lives of millions of people around the world [File: Spencer Platt/Getty Images]Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has warned that Russia’s withdrawal endangers the lives of millions of people around the world, primarily in Asia and Africa.
“By withdrawing from the grain agreement, Russia endangered the lives of millions of people around the world, primarily in Asia and Africa,” Kuleba told Al Jazeera, adding that the gain corridor had resulted in wheat, corn and other related commodities falling by 20 percent.

“After the announcement of Russia’s withdrawal from the agreement, the prices will likely go up, affecting the livelihood of millions of people across the globe, including Asia,” Kuleba said.

The UN and Turkey brokered the grain deal in July last year in an effort to avert a global food crisis by facilitating Ukrainian grain exports disrupted by the war in Ukraine.

The UN World Food Programme has credited the initiative with facilitating the shipment of more than 725,200 tonnes of grains such as corn, wheat and rapeseed to relieve hunger around the world, including in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
 
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