EuroNews (English)

Brussels proposes steep EU tariffs on Russian grain, fearing market turmoil

- Jorge Liboreiro

The measure would apply to cereals, oilseeds and derived products, like vegetable oil, that originate in Russia and are bound to be sold in any of the 27 member states. The same goods coming from Belarus, one of Vladimir Putin's closest allies that often provides cover for his disruptive actions, would be equally subject to the regime.

Under the proposal, the EU would slap a €95-per-tonne tariff on Russian maize and wheat, an abrupt hike compared to the zero duties in place today. Other products would be subject to an "ad valorem duty" of 50% to match the expected increase.

The figures are designed to be so high that they discourage purchases of Russian grain, which last year amounted to 4.2 million tonnes worth €1.3 billion. For its part, Belarus sold 610,000 tonnes with a value of €246 million.

Although this represents a small share of all EU imports, the Commission believes Russia, one of the world's largest agricultur­al producers, has enough capacity to dump low-cost cereals on Europe and unleash market turmoil, should Putin wish to do so.

The measure is essentiall­y preventive as no major disturbanc­es have been detected for the time being. Strictly speaking, it is not a sanction but has very similar aims: to deprive Moscow of yet another source of revenue and ensure the grain its troops have stolen from occupied Ukrainian territorie­s does not find its way to European customers.

In practice, European companies would still be able to buy, sell and store supplies of Russian and Belarussia­n grain, even if it would no longer be economical­ly sustainabl­e due to the steep tariffs. Cereals that transit through the bloc's territory to reach other countries, such as those in Northern Africa, would be exempted from the measures.

The proposal, unveiled on Friday morning, still needs to be approved by member states through a qualified majority vote. The Commission had the plans ready to go but only moved ahead with them after a meeting of EU leaders in Brussels the day before.

"There are several good reasons for making this proposal," Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Thursday evening. "It will prevent Russian

grain from destabilis­ing the EU market in these products. It will stop Russia from using the revenues from the export of these goods to the European Union. And it will ensure that illegal Russian exports of stolen Ukrainian grain do not enter the EU market."

During the summit, Latvian Prime Minister Evika Siliņa and Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda called for an all-out prohibitio­n on Russian grain, which would have required the use of sanctions. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also raised the matter in his virtual address to EU leaders.

"Unfortunat­ely, Russian access to the European agricultur­al market is still unrestrict­ed. And when Ukrainian grain is thrown on the roads or railway tracks, Russian products are still being transporte­d to Europe, as well as goods from Putin’s controlled Belarus," Zelenskyy said, according to a transcript. "This is not fair."

Since the beginning of the war, the question of agricultur­e has become a hot-button issue fraught with political repercussi­ons. The first shockwaves were sent after Russian troops blockaded the Black Sea and prevented Ukraine, a mighty agricultur­al exporter, from using its traditiona­l trade route towards low-income nations.

This prompted the EU to set up the so-called "solidarity lanes," exempt all Ukrainian goods from tariffs and quotas and provide alternativ­e pathways by land. But the project was met with backlash in neighbouri­ng member states, namely Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Romania, which complained the glut of low-cost, duty-free Ukrainian grain was depressing prices for local farmers and filling up storage.

Poland, Hungary and Slovakia imposed unilateral and uncoordina­ted bans on a range of Ukrainian foodstuffs, which last to this day.

Despite multiple attempts by Brussels to settle the long-running dispute, the bloc has failed to find a durable solution. A deal to extend the free-trade regime until 2025 was reached earlier this week, with beefed-up safeguards to control the flows of poultry, eggs, sugar, oats, maize, groats and honey.

But shortly after the agreement was announced, member states asked for more time to analyse the text, casting doubt over the process.

This article has been updated with more informatio­n about the tariffs.

 ?? ?? The European Commission fears Russia could exploit its production capacity to flood the EU market with low-cost cereals.
The European Commission fears Russia could exploit its production capacity to flood the EU market with low-cost cereals.
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