The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Grain exports remain at a near standstill

Shipping companies fear mines and have questions about deal.

- By Aya Batrawy

Shipping companies are not rushing to export millions of tons of grain trapped in Ukraine despite a breakthrou­gh deal to provide safe corridors through the Black Sea. That is because explosive mines are drifting in the waters. Ship owners are assessing the risks, and many still have questions over how the deal will unfold.

The complexiti­es of the deal have set off a slow, cautious start, but it’s only good for 120 days — and the clock began ticking two weeks ago.

The goal over the next four months is to get some 20 million tons of grain out of three Ukrainian sea ports blocked since Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion. That provides time for about four to five large bulk carriers per day to transport grain from the ports to millions of impoverish­ed people worldwide facing hunger.

It also provides ample time for things to go awry. Only hours after the signing July 22, Russian missiles struck Ukraine’s port of Odesa — one of those included in the agreement.

Another key element of the deal offers assurances that shipping and insurers carrying Russian grain and fertilizer will not get caught in the wider net of Western sanctions. But the agreement brokered by Turkey and the U.N. is running up against the reality of how difficult and risky the pact will be to carry out.

“We have to work very hard to now understand the detail of how this is going to work practicall­y,” said Guy Platten, secretary-general of the Internatio­nal Chamber of Shipping, representi­ng national shipowners associatio­ns that account for about 80% of the world’s merchant fleet.

“Can we make sure and guarantee the safety of the crews? What’s going to happen with the mines and the minefields, as well? So lots of uncertaint­y and unknowns at the moment,” he said.

Getting wheat and other food out is critical to farmers in Ukraine, who are running out of storage capacity amid a new harvest. Those grains are vital to millions of people in Africa, parts of the Middle East and South Asia, who are already facing food shortages and, in some cases, famine.

Ukraine and Russia are key global suppliers of wheat, barley, corn and sunflower oil, with fighting in the Black Sea region, known as the “breadbaske­t of the world,” pushing up food prices, threatenin­g political stability in developing nations and leading countries to ban some food exports, worsening the crisis.

U.N. humanitari­an chief Martin Griffiths said work at the newly opened Joint Coordinati­on Center in Istanbul overseeing the export deal is “nonstop with the aim of seeing the shipments heading out of Ukrainian ports quickly, safely and effectivel­y.”

He said Frederick Kenney, Jr., director of legal and external affairs at the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on and a retired U.S. Coast Guard rear admiral and judge advocate, is leading the U.N.’s efforts to get the grain deal up and running.

The deal stipulates that Russia and Ukraine will provide “maximum assurances” for ships that brave the journey through the Black Sea to the Ukrainian ports of Odesa, Chernomors­k and Yuzhny.

“The primary risk that’s faced is obviously going to be mines,” said Munro Anderson, head of intelligen­ce and a founding partner at Dryad. The maritime security advisory company is working with insurers and brokers to assess the risks that ships could face along the route as sea mines laid by Ukraine to deter Russia are drifting.

Turkey’s defense minister on Wednesday said demining the waters was not immediatel­y required but that could change.

Ukrainian officials have expressed hope that exports could resume from one port within days, but they also have said it could take two weeks for all three to become operationa­l again. Experts in Ukraine are working on determinin­g safe routes for ships.

Shipowners, charterers and insurance firms, meanwhile, are trying to understand how the deal will play out.

“I think it’s going to come (down) to the position of the marine insurers that provide war risk and how much they are going to be adding in additional charges for vessels to go into that area,” said Michelle Wiese Bockmann, shipping and commoditie­s analyst at Lloyd’s List, a global shipping news publicatio­n.

Bockmann said vessels carrying this kind of load typically have between 20 to 25 seafarers on board.

“You can’t risk those lives without something concrete and acceptable to the shipowners and to their charterers to move grain,” she said.

Oleksiy Melnyk, an analyst with the Kyiv-based Razumkov Center think tank, said safety issues largely are unresolved because Russian rockets can hit warehouses storing grain and ports.

“Shipowners and insurance companies are scared; they haven’t received any reliable security guarantees,” Melnyk said. “We’re seeing just words and promises, which are worth little at a time of war.”

Marine insurers reached by AP declined to comment on whether they would provide coverage for these ships.

The war has wreaked havoc on global trade, stranding more than 100 ships in Ukraine’s many ports.

At the three ports in the export agreement, 13 bulk carriers and cargo ships have been stuck at Chornomors­k, six in Odesa and three at Yuzhny, data from Lloyd’s List Intelligen­ce shows. Some of those ships still might have crews aboard that could be mobilized to start exporting grains.

Ukrainian traders have been able to send some grain through the Danube River, which helped buoy exports to about 1.5 million tons in May and up to 2 million tons in June, though that is still less than half the monthly grain shipments of 4 to 5 million tons prior to the war, according to Svetlana Malysh, a Black Sea agricultur­e markets analyst with Refinitiv.

Over the 2021-2022 marketing year, Russia exported about 30 million tons of wheat, according to Refinitiv trade flows. That is the lowest level since 2017, in part because of the chilling effect of sanctions. Russian fertilizer exports also dropped 25% in the first quarter of the year compared with the same period last year, Malysh said.

For ships heading to Ukraine’s three ports, smaller Ukrainian pilot boats will guide the vessels through approved corridors. The entire operation will be overseen by a Joint Coordinati­on Center in Istanbul staffed by officials from Ukraine, Russia, Turkey and the United Nations.

Once ships reach port, they will be loaded with tens of thousands of tons of grains before departing back to the Bosphorus Strait, where they will be boarded to inspect them for weapons. There likely will be inspection­s for ships embarking to Ukraine as well.

Because the process is so complex and slow-moving, it’s unlikely to have a significan­t impact on the price of grain worldwide.

“The balance of power on this agreement still sits with Russia,” said Anderson, Dryad’s head of intelligen­ce. Any Ukrainian ports outside the agreement face increased risk of attack, he said.

“I think what Russia wants ... is to be seen as the state that controls the narrative within the Black Sea,” Anderson said.

 ?? EFREM LUKATSKY/AP ?? A farmer on July 4 collects harvest on his field about 6 miles from the front line in the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, Ukraine. Shipping companies are not rushing to export millions of tons of trapped grain out of Ukraine despite a breakthrou­gh deal to provide safe corridors through the Black Sea, because the waters are mined.
EFREM LUKATSKY/AP A farmer on July 4 collects harvest on his field about 6 miles from the front line in the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, Ukraine. Shipping companies are not rushing to export millions of tons of trapped grain out of Ukraine despite a breakthrou­gh deal to provide safe corridors through the Black Sea, because the waters are mined.
 ?? AP ?? Servicemen of Donetsk People’s Republic Emergency Ministry on April 29 work to defuse a Ukrainian mine in an area of the Mariupol Sea Port. Ship owners continue to assess the risks, and many still have questions over how the deal will unfold.
AP Servicemen of Donetsk People’s Republic Emergency Ministry on April 29 work to defuse a Ukrainian mine in an area of the Mariupol Sea Port. Ship owners continue to assess the risks, and many still have questions over how the deal will unfold.

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