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Workers load grain at a grain port in Izmail, Ukraine on 2 April. Alamy Stock Photo

Russia agrees two-month extension to deal allowing Ukrainian grain to be exported

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that the two sides had agreed to extend the deal.

RUSSIA AGREED TO a two-month extension of a deal that has allowed Ukraine to ship grain through the Black Sea to parts of the world struggling with hunger, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced today, a boost to global food security after the war drove up prices.

Turkey and the UN brokered the breakthrough accord with the warring sides last summer, which came with a separate agreement to facilitate shipments of Russian food and fertiliser that Moscow insists has not been applied.

Russia had threatened to bow out if its concerns were not ironed out by Thursday. Such brinkmanship is not new: With a similar extension in the balance in March, Russia unilaterally decided to renew the deal for 60 days instead of the 120 days outlined in the agreement.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said today that problems would need to be resolved “at the technical level”. Neither she nor Erdogan mentioned any concessions Moscow may have received.

“We will continue our efforts to ensure that all the conditions of the agreement are fulfilled so that it continues in the next period,” said Erdogan, who announced the highly anticipated decision two days after being forced into a runoff in Turkey’s presidential election.

Extending the Black Sea grain initiative is a win for countries in Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia that rely on Ukrainian wheat, barley, vegetable oil and other affordable food products, especially as drought takes a toll.

The deal helped lower prices of food commodities like wheat over the last year, but that relief has not reached kitchen tables.

“Ukrainian and Russian products feed the world,” UN secretary-general António Guterres said. “They matter because we are still in the throes of a record-breaking cost-of-living crisis.”

Deputy prime minister Alexander Kubrakov welcomed the extension, but emphasised that the deal “has to work effectively.”

On Facebook, he blamed Russia for dragging its heels on joint inspections of ships by Russian, Ukrainian, UN and Turkish officials.

Average daily inspections – meant to ensure vessels carry only food and not weapons that could aid either side – have steadily dropped from a peak of 10.6 in October to 3.2 last month. Shipments of Ukrainian grain also have declined in recent weeks.

Russia had denied slowing the work. No vessels have been cleared to enter Ukraine’s three open ports since 6 May, and Kubrakov says nearly 70 vessels are waiting in Turkish waters to participate.

Russia, meanwhile, is shipping record amounts of its wheat through other ports. Critics say that suggests Moscow was posturing or trying to wrest concessions in areas such as Western sanctions.

The deal has allowed more than 30 million tonnes of Ukrainian grain to be shipped, with more than half that going to developing nations.

China, Spain and Turkey are the biggest recipients, and Russia says that shows food is not going to the poorest countries.

Guterres has said developed countries bring in Ukrainian corn for animal feed, while emerging economies receive “a majority” of grain for people to eat. He noted exports bring prices down for everyone.

“Looking ahead, we hope that exports of food and fertilisers, including ammonia, from the Russian Federation and Ukraine will be able to reach global supply chains safely and predictably,” the UN chief said today.

The US said Russia should stop creating hurdles to the deal.

“We should not need to remind Moscow every few weeks to keep their promises and to stop using people’s hunger as a weapon in their war against Ukraine,” state department deputy spokesman Vedant Patel told reporters.

Russia is expected to export more wheat than any country ever has in one year, at 44 million tonnes, said Caitlin Welsh, director of the global food security programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

Welsh said Russia knows that the less grain Ukraine can export, the more it can make up for the shortfall.

And restrictions on Black Sea shipments mean the war-torn country would have to rely more on land routes through the European Union, which has stirred anger from its neighbours.

“The more it restricts Ukraine’s access to Black Sea ports, the better it is for its political influence with trading partners and the better it is for Russia in the sense that it’s straining unity among EU member states and their support for Ukraine,” she said.

With Ukraine’s wheat harvest coming up in June and the need to sell that crop in July, maintaining a Black Sea shipping corridor is key to avoid “taking another large chunk of wheat and other grains off the market,” said William Osnato, a senior research analyst at agriculture data and analytics firm Gro Intelligence.

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    Mute Gavan Hogan
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    May 17th 2023, 9:15 PM

    Two months is better than nothing.
    Well done Turkiye. The EU has treated Turkiye like dirt for 40 years.

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    Mute William slevin
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    May 17th 2023, 9:21 PM

    @Gavan Hogan: turkey has treated its own people like dirt…and still continue to deny the Armenian genocide and death match…so yea…turkey ain’t no choir boy…

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    Mute Shaun Gallagher
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    May 17th 2023, 9:37 PM

    @Gavan Hogan: Turkiye buying cheap oil and grain of Ukraine then selling it onto Europe. Suppose it’s a way around the sanctions anyway

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    Mute Aido
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    May 17th 2023, 9:47 PM

    @Gavan Hogan: What about the Kurds?

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    Mute Gavan Hogan
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    May 17th 2023, 9:53 PM

    @Shaun Gallagher: Turkiye applied for EEC membership from the start, before Ireland. If they were now an EU member state, the politics would have been different.
    However, EU has rejected Turkish membership and now Turkiye is an independant country in NATO that finds itself in a position of power broker in the Ukraine – Russia war.
    In this situation the Turkish president has shown that good international diplomacy can exist in a NATO country.

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    Mute Gavan Hogan
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    May 17th 2023, 9:57 PM

    @Aido: What about the wax in my left ear.

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    Mute Gavan Hogan
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    May 17th 2023, 10:20 PM

    @William slevin: Ireland is not a member of NATO. Ireland has no say in international wars. Turkiye joined NATO in 1952. Ireland refuses to join NATO. Turkiye has a position in world politics. Ireland won’t even join the EU military alliance. What a weak and insipid country, but Irish people expect that ” someone else ” will protect you.

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    Mute Brian Madden
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    May 17th 2023, 10:50 PM

    @Gavan Hogan: turkey is run by a dictator. Its human rights record is terrible and they occupy northern Cyprus.

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    Mute Real Chief Police Trump MAGA 2024
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    May 17th 2023, 11:14 PM

    @Gavan Hogan: you like war so much on your bike and take your gun with you

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    Mute Steve Bell
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    May 18th 2023, 12:11 AM

    Ru zz skis have no choice but to renew or else Nato Navy will be forced to do the escorting in the Black Sea, Poo tin can’t afford to lose face from such an eventuality

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    Mute Dan Dare
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    May 18th 2023, 12:19 AM

    Wow. Thanks Russia. Hungry people thank you.

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    Mute Elrond Rivendell
    Favourite Elrond Rivendell
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    May 17th 2023, 11:48 PM

    How benevolent of them. Fascist cochons.

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