Viet Nam News

Tougher EU restrictio­ns on Ukraine imports

- AFP

EU states and the European Parliament have agreed tougher restrictio­ns on some Ukraine farm imports, European Union presidency holder Belgium said.

The accord extends the duty-free access the bloc has given to Ukrainian agricultur­al goods since Russia's 2022 military operation, but sets caps for poultry, eggs, sugar, maize, groats and honey to average volumes seen between mid-2021 and end-2023.

No cap was applied to wheat, which countries such as France and Poland had initially argued for.

Lawmakers are eyeing June elections that will usher in a new parliament. Many, especially conservati­ves and on the far-right, are keen to show European farmers that they are in their corner.

The preliminar­y agreement still has to be formalised. A late-monday meeting of EU ambassador­s gave its approval on behalf of member countries. A European Parliament committee was to weigh it yesterday before giving its assent.

Diplomats had previously said the caps would trim around 240 million euros (US$260 million) from the amount Ukrainian farm products earn in the EU, compared with 2023.

Ukraine says it supplies only around one per cent of the EU'S eggs and two per cent of its poultry while making up for a deficit of sugar on the EU market.

The European Union has sought to maintain solidarity with Ukraine while listening to European farmers who have been protesting low incomes partly blamed on Ukrainian goods they say are undercutti­ng their markets.

The extension of duty-free imports of Ukrainian agricultur­al products is to kick in before the current exemption period runs out on June 5.

The European Parliament issued a statement saying that if there was "significan­t disruption to the EU market or the markets of one or more EU countries due to Ukrainian imports, for instance wheat, the regulation ensures that the (European) Commission can take swift action and impose any measures it deems necessary".

The rapporteur for the accord, Sandra Kalniete of the centre-right PPE grouping, said it "fortified safeguards to protect EU farmers in case of market turbulence sparked by Ukrainian imports."

"The ripple effects of Russia's relentless targeting of Ukraine and its economy are being felt by EU farmers," she said in a statement.

The farmers' union grouping COPA-COGECA and five farming federation­s said in a statement that the deal did not go far enough.

 ?? AFP/VNA File Photo ?? The extension of duty-free imports of Ukrainian agricultur­al products is to kick in before the current exemption period runs out on June 5.
AFP/VNA File Photo The extension of duty-free imports of Ukrainian agricultur­al products is to kick in before the current exemption period runs out on June 5.

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