The Pak Banker

UN-Russia grain, fertiliser exports talks end without breakthrou­gh

- GENEVA -REUTERS

United Nations chiefs held talks with Russian officials Friday on the Black Sea agreements on exporting grain and fertiliser­s, eight days before one of the deals is set to expire.

The discussion­s took place behind closed doors at the UN Palais des Nations headquarte­rs in Geneva and wrapped up mid-afternoon.

"The discussion­s updated on progress made in facilitati­ng the unimpeded export of food and fertiliser­s, including ammonia, originatin­g from the Russian Federation to global markets," said a UN statement.

The meeting between UN humanitari­an chief Martin Griffiths, UN trade and developmen­t agency head Rebeca Grynspan and a Russian delegation led by deputy foreign minister Sergei Vershinin also focused on "steps taken to facilitate payments, shipping insurance, and access to EU ports for grains and fertiliser".

"The world cannot afford to let global fertiliser accessibil­ity problems become a global food shortage," the statement said. The UN also managed to unblock a shipment of 20,000 tons of fertiliser in the Netherland­s, stuck in the Dutch port of Rotterdam due to EU-imposed sanctions on certain individual­s and goods.

The shipment will head for Malawi in the coming days under the auspices of the UN's World Food Programme, according to the Netherland­s' Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"The fertiliser in question was frozen because a sanctioned individual is involved with the Russian company that owns it," it said, without naming the individual or company involved.

"The decision to release the fertiliser was made on the understand­ing that the UN would ensure that it is delivered to the agreed location (Malawi) and that the Russian company and sanctioned individual will earn nothing from the transactio­n," the Hague said.

Two agreements brokered by the UN and Turkey were signed on July 22.

The first was to allow the export of Ukrainian grain blocked by Russia's war in the country, while the second was on the export of Russian food and fertiliser­s despite Western sanctions imposed on Moscow following its invasion.

The 120-day Black Sea Grain Initiative runs out on November 19, and the United Nations is seeking to renew it for one year.

Moscow, however, has not yet said whether it will agree to that. It has complained that the second agreement exempting its fertiliser­s from sanctions, which is due to run for three years, is not being respected.

"The UN calls on all actors to expedite the removal of any remaining impediment­s to the export and transporta­tion of fertiliser­s to countries most in need," the UN spokespers­on added.

Ukraine is one of the world's top grain producers, and the Russian invasion had blocked 20 million tonnes of grain in its ports until the safe passage deal was agreed to. As of Thursday, 10.2 million tonnes of grains and other foodstuffs had been exported from Ukraine under the deal, relieving some fears over a deepening global food security crisis.

The UN's Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) said the implicatio­ns could be very concerning for global food security if the deal is not renewed. "We see it as an important initiative that has improved food availabili­ty," said Boubaker Ben Belhassen, director of the FAO's markets and trade division.

"However, should we be in a scenario that nobody wants to see, that there is a terminatio­n of the deal, I think the situation could be really difficult and the implicatio­ns could be very serious," he told reporters via video-link from Rome, where the FAO is based.

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