Across Ukraine’s farm belt, silos are bursting with 15 million tonnes of corn from last year’s autumn harvest, most of which should have been hitting world markets.
The stockpiles — about half the corn Ukraine had been expected to export for the season — have become increasingly difficult to get to buyers, providing a glimpse into the turmoil Russia’s war has wrought in the approximately US$120 billion global grains trade.
Gummed up by supply chain bottlenecks, skyrocketing freight rates and extreme weather events, markets are bracing for more upheavals as deliveries from Ukraine and Russia — which together account for about one-quarter of the world’s grains trade — turn increasingly complicated and raise the specter of food shortages.
Illustration: Lance liu
Before Russia’s attack, Ukraine’s corn would have made its way to the country’s Black Sea ports of Odesa and Mykolaiv by rail and loaded on to ships bound for Asia and Europe, but with those ports shuttered, small amounts of corn are creakily winding their way westward by rail through Romania and Poland before being shipped out.
An added aggravation is that wheels on the wagons have to be changed at the border, because unlike European rails, Ukrainian trains run on wider, Soviet-era tracks.
“Railways are not supposed to go that way with the grain,” Ukrainian Agribusiness Club deputy chairwoman Kateryna Rybachenko said in an interview. “This makes the whole logistics very expensive and inefficient, and also very slow. Logistically, it’s a big problem.”
Ukraine is one of the world’s biggest exporters of corn, wheat and sunflower oil, flows of which are largely stalled. Grains exports are limited to 500,000 tonnes per month, down from as much as 5 million tonnes before the war, a loss of US$1.5 billion, the Ukrainian Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food said.
Crops from Russia — the world’s biggest exporter of wheat — are still flowing, but questions persist over delivery and payment for future shipments.
Disruptions in the flows of grains and oilseeds — staples for billions of people and animals across the world — are sending prices soaring. Countries fearing potential food shortages are scrambling to find alternative suppliers, and new trades are emerging.
India, which historically kept its huge wheat harvests at home — thanks to a price set by the Indian government — is jumping into the export market, hawking record amounts across Asia.
Brazil’s exports of wheat in the first three months of this year far surpassed those in all of last year. US corn shipments are heading to Spain for the first time in about four years, and Egypt is considering swapping fertilizer for Romanian grain and holding wheat talks with Argentina.
However, even those efforts might not be good enough, said Dan Basse, president of AgResource, an agriculture markets research firm.
“We can move the deck chairs around today,” he said.
However, if the conflict stretches into the summer, when wheat exports from the Black Sea usually accelerate, “then you start running into problems. That’s when the world starts to see shortfalls,” Basse said.
Alternative suppliers come with pricier freight, longer transits or differing quality, further accelerating food inflation.
World supplies were already reeling from droughts in Canada and Brazil, as well as transportation blockages in parts of the world, from rail logjams in the US to trucker strikes across Spain. The added shock from the war sent a gauge of prices to a record, with corn and wheat futures in Chicago up more than 20 percent since the beginning of this year.
The UN has warned that food prices — which are at an all-time high — could rise as much as 22 percent.
A severe drop in Black Sea exports could leave as many as 13.1 million additional people undernourished, the UN said, deepening the rise in global hunger in a world still recovering from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
For now, other suppliers are stepping in.
Drawn by the higher prices, India, the second-largest wheat grower after China, has boosted exports, which might have reached a record 8.5 million tonnes in the season ended last month.
“I don’t remember the last time when open-market prices were higher than the government’s minimum support price,” said Nilesh Shivaji Shedge, 46, who grows wheat on one-fifth of his family’s six hectares.
India’s Kandla and Mundra ports in the western state of Gujarat, the main gateways for wheat exports, have been abuzz with activity as sales have surged. The government is making more railway capacity available to transport wheat, while port authorities have been asked to increase the number of terminals and containers dedicated to the grain.
Some ports on the Indian east coast and the Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai are also preparing to handle wheat shipments.
“We will continue to export wheat in a big way to meet needs in countries who are not getting supplies from conflict areas,” Indian Minister of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution Piyush Goyal said on Sunday. “Our farmers are focused on increasing production.”
India is negotiating access to markets in Egypt, Turkey and China, three of the four largest importers, and other potential buyers, including Bosnia, Nigeria and Iran, the Indian Ministry of Commerce said.
Exports from the country could “easily” touch 12 million tonnes in the 2022-23 season, which started this month, said Fauzan Alavi, a director with Allana Group, which has traded agricultural commodities since 1865.
Brazil — a net wheat importer — is also expecting its highest exports of the grain in a decade.
Low river levels in neighboring Argentina pushed sales toward Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul state.
A bumper harvest, a weak currency and a delayed soybean crop that allowed extra time for wheat flows have buoyed sales, Serra Morena Commodities trader Walter von Muhlen Filho said.
Total wheat exports from the country are set to reach 2.1 million tonnes for the first three months of the year, almost double of those in all of last year.
Destinations include Turkey, South Africa and Sudan, all for the first time in at least four years, Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade data showed.
Sales for Australia, a large wheat exporter, are running at full tilt, with shipping slots booked for months and buyers purchasing the grain further out than usual.
Some governments are limiting trade to counter higher food prices. Serbia, the ninth-largest corn shipper, temporarily barred exports. Argentina and Indonesia increased taxes on vegetable oil exports, and Kazakhstan plans to limit wheat shipments.
The global grains trade, not including rice, could shrink by 12 million tonnes this season, the most in at least a decade, the International Grains Council said.
“High prices more often than not, rather than just having more exporters, will result in protectionism,” said Michael Magdovitz, a senior analyst at Rabobank.
Meanwhile, importers are rolling back restrictions to get grain from more origins.
Spain — the second-largest buyer of Ukrainian corn — relaxed rules on pesticides to allow for feed from Argentina and Brazil. It also got 145,000 tonnes from the US last month, its first shipments since 2018, and China, another major Ukrainian corn customer, ramped up US purchases.
While that is helping narrow the gap, there is little room for error.
The main Brazilian corn harvest is a few months off and any bad weather in the northern hemisphere could mean curtailed supplies for farmers who feed the grain to hogs and chickens, said Nathan Cordier, an analyst at Agritel in Paris.
Some feed mills in southern Italy have closed from a lack of grain, said Alexander Doring, secretary general at European feed-industry group FEFAC.
Supply is being booked from the US and Argentina, which needs 10 days of extra shipping time versus the Black Sea, he said.
Italian industry group Assalzoo said some livestock farmers are culling their herds, starting with milk-producing cows.
Italy gets more than 5 million tonnes of corn annually from abroad, and producers are struggling to pay their bills as the cost of the grain has skyrocketed, Giulio Usai, an executive at Assalzoo, said in an interview.
Livestock farmers are getting almost no supplies from Russia or Ukraine due to the naval blockade in the Black Sea, Usai said.
Efforts are being made to source from the Americas, but the process could “take time,” he said, adding that pig farmers could be at risk.
“These are the things we are trying to manage — how we can change the origin of our product in order to get what we need,” said Miguel Angel Higuera Pascual, director of Spanish pig-farming group Anprogapor. “This is the situation we have right now, to try to readjust.”
North African and Middle Eastern importers are particularly dependent on Russian and Ukrainian supplies, and are grappling with finding alternatives. Algeria — which opened to Black Sea wheat just last year — is already reverting to French shipments.
Egypt — the world’s biggest wheat importer, with more than 80 percent of its imports coming from Russia and Ukraine over the past five years — is having to cut back purchases as prices soar.
Egypt scrapped two straight import tenders, as offers dried up and prices shot up by about US$100 per tonne, including freight. It is holding off on further tenders until at least the middle of next month, Egyptian Minister of Supply and Internal Trade Aly al-Moselhy said.
The country is struggling to maintain a bread subsidy program used by about 70 million of its citizens.
With no signs that the supply crunch might ease any time soon, Rabobank last month forecast that wheat futures would average US$11 or more per bushel through the end of the year, and corn about US$7.75 per bushel or more.
That is an increase of 30 percent or more compared with the end of last year.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Thursday last week told Dutch lawmakers that Russian troops are “doing everything to ruin our agriculture potential and to provoke a food crisis not only in Ukraine, but in the world.”
Troops had placed land mines in fields, he said, adding that farm equipment had been destroyed.
On the ground, farmers are struggling to get fertilizers to wheat crops sown in the autumn as they emerge from winter dormancy.
Plantings of key spring crops such as corn and sunflowers are set to drop as producers deal with diesel shortages and stolen tractors.
“We all hope this war will end soon and ports will open,” Rybachenko said. “We’re feeling responsible — not only for the food safety inside of Ukraine, but also the food safety of the world.”
Why is Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) not a “happy camper” these days regarding Taiwan? Taiwanese have not become more “CCP friendly” in response to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) use of spies and graft by the United Front Work Department, intimidation conducted by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the Armed Police/Coast Guard, and endless subversive political warfare measures, including cyber-attacks, economic coercion, and diplomatic isolation. The percentage of Taiwanese that prefer the status quo or prefer moving towards independence continues to rise — 76 percent as of December last year. According to National Chengchi University (NCCU) polling, the Taiwanese
US President Donald Trump is systematically dismantling the network of multilateral institutions, organizations and agreements that have helped prevent a third world war for more than 70 years. Yet many governments are twisting themselves into knots trying to downplay his actions, insisting that things are not as they seem and that even if they are, confronting the menace in the White House simply is not an option. Disagreement must be carefully disguised to avoid provoking his wrath. For the British political establishment, the convenient excuse is the need to preserve the UK’s “special relationship” with the US. Following their White House
It would be absurd to claim to see a silver lining behind every US President Donald Trump cloud. Those clouds are too many, too dark and too dangerous. All the same, viewed from a domestic political perspective, there is a clear emerging UK upside to Trump’s efforts at crashing the post-Cold War order. It might even get a boost from Thursday’s Washington visit by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. In July last year, when Starmer became prime minister, the Labour Party was rigidly on the defensive about Europe. Brexit was seen as an electorally unstable issue for a party whose priority
After the coup in Burma in 2021, the country’s decades-long armed conflict escalated into a full-scale war. On one side was the Burmese army; large, well-equipped, and funded by China, supported with weapons, including airplanes and helicopters from China and Russia. On the other side were the pro-democracy forces, composed of countless small ethnic resistance armies. The military junta cut off electricity, phone and cell service, and the Internet in most of the country, leaving resistance forces isolated from the outside world and making it difficult for the various armies to coordinate with one another. Despite being severely outnumbered and