Times Colonist

Wheat and corn prices leap after dam breach

- COURTNEY BONNELL and WYATTE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS

WASHINGTON — Global prices for wheat and corn soared on Tuesday after a major dam in Ukraine collapsed, renewing market fears about the fragility of the country’s ability to ship food to Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia as it fights a war with Russia.

Wheat prices gained 2.4% in early trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, to $6.39 US a bushel.

The cost of corn rose more than 1%, to $6.04 a bushel, and oats gained 0.73%, to $3.46 per unit. Prices were higher earlier, but faded.

The destructio­n of the Kakhovka dam and hydroelect­ric power station, which sits in a Russian-controlled area on the Dnieper River, raised concerns about disruption to Ukraine’s affordable supplies of wheat, barley, corn and sunflower oil getting to developing nations where people are struggling with hunger and high food prices.

“Anytime this war shows signs of getting further escalated, there’s a lot of concern,” said Joseph Glauber, senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute. “Markets react to that.”

Ukraine and Russia are both major agricultur­al suppliers and the war’s disruption to their exports worsened a global food crisis tied to droughts and other factors. Breakthrou­gh agreements brokered by the UN and Turkey last year got food moving again through the Black Sea, but it has faced setbacks.

Russia briefly pulled out of the deal last year, has threatened to leave again, is accused of slowing shipments from Ukraine and has only agreed to renew the deal for two months at a time.

“People are going to be watching to see what happens with the agreement,” said Glauber, former chief economist at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. “This reminds everyone that it’s not just pro forma, that this could be a very serious developmen­t if indeed the agreement is broken.”

There are massive agricultur­al fields in southern Ukraine where the dam burst, and while the collapse has endangered crops in the path of the floodwater­s, Glauber said less wheat has been planted in that area because it’s near the fighting and a lot is growing elsewhere.

The collapse has threatened drinking water supplies, with officials also warning of a looming environmen­tal disaster — pointing to oil escaping from the dam machinery and significan­t flooding.

Andrey Sizov, managing director of Black Sea agricultur­al markets research firm SovEcon, said the dam collapse looked “like a big escalation with dire consequenc­es and huge headline risk.”

“This could be just the start of the bull run,” Sizov wrote on Twitter on Tuesday.

The wheat futures rally overnight and early Tuesday lost steam as the day progressed.

Wheat, vegetable oil and other food commodity prices have fallen from record highs last year after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — thanks in part to the Black Sea grain deal — but the relief in prices has not made it to markets, grocery stores and kitchen tables.

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