Türkiye in efforts for extension of grain deal

Türkiye in efforts for extension of grain deal

ISTANBUL

The accord allowing for Ukrainian grain to be exported via the Black Sea, crucial in easing a global food crisis sparked by the Russian invasion, has been the subject of grueling talks to get Moscow to agree to its renewal.

Set to expire late on July 17, the deal brokered by the United Nations and Türkiye, signed by Moscow and Kiev in July 2022, established a protected sea corridor allowing Ukraine's agricultural goods to reach global markets.

On July 4, Russia warned that it saw "no grounds" to extend the current deal, criticizing alleged obstacles to its own exports of agricultural products.

Moscow had regularly threatened to quit the grain deal, complaining that secondary effects of Western restrictions on shipping and insurance as well as banks were blocking the export of its agricultural products.

On July 11, Russia launched a series of drone attacks that targeted grain facilities at a Ukrainian port in the Odesa region which houses three maritime terminals key to exporting grain.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who brokered the deal, has insisted that work on extending it continues with both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky.

"Mr. Zelensky favors continuing the initiative, and Mr. Putin has some suggestions," Erdoğan told reporters on July 12 at the end of a two-day NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius.

Meanwhile, Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister Burak Akçapar and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Vershinin, discussed the initiative on July 13, according to a statement issued by the Russian Foreign Ministry.

The conversation was initiated by Türkiye and "special attention was paid to the implementation of the 'Black Sea initiative' on the export of Ukrainian food," the statement read.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, for his part, supports removing hurdles to Russia exporting its fertilizers – another element of the July 2022 deal that Moscow has regularly complained is not being respected – due to Western sanctions blocking transactions by Russia's agricultural bank, his spokesman said. Guterres sent Putin a letter on the subject on July 11.

By ensuring the security of maritime cargo traffic in the Black Sea – along with inspections to counter arms shipments – the deal has allowed the export of nearly 33 million tonnes since it entered force on Aug. 1, 2022, mostly wheat and maize.

The accord helped bring down prices that had shot higher following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and avoid hunger and famine in countries heavily dependent upon imports.

China was the biggest importer at 7.75 metric tonnes, followed by Spain at 5.6 million tonnes and Türkiye at 3.1 million tonnes, according to the coordination center set up under the accord.

The deal also enabled the World Food Programme to provide 725,000 tonnes to countries experiencing crises, such as Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

"A lack of food supplies produces knock-on effects for the lives of millions of people, particularly the poorest," the U.N. said.

Shipments have slowed ahead of the expiration of the deal, with only seven ships leaving the Ukrainian ports of Odesa and Chernomorsk between July 2 and 13. That was the average number which left daily last October.