Russia's grain
exports have stopped due to curbs brought in to protect domestic supply,
putting big deals at risk, an influential farm lobby group said on 24 December,
according to Reuters.
Read the article HERE.
Russia's main wheat
buyers are Turkey, Iran and, very vulnerable to supply disruption, Egypt.
Moscow imposed
informal grain export controls with tougher quality monitoring and limits on
railroad loadings earlier this month, as it tackles a financial crisis linked
to plunging oil and Western sanctions.
"Since last
Thursday not a single vessel, which had been due to sail under contracts, has
left," Arkady Zlochevsky, the head of Russia's Grain Union, the farmers
lobby group, said.
Officials also plan
to impose duty on grain exports. Zlochevsky said its exact level was an
unimportant detail, as he was sure it would be prohibitive.
"All loadings
are suspended, there is only a need to legally formalize it," Zlochevsky
said. Global wheat futures rose after his comments.
A spokeswoman for
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich, who had promised to prepare
the proposal for an export duty, was not available for comment.
Zlochevsky criticized
the decision to impose restrictions for the third time in six years.
Russia imposed a duty
on wheat exports in 2008 and an official ban in 2010 when a drought hit its
crop.
The 2010 ban was
partially responsible for triggering social unrest and a revolution in Egypt as
more than 500,000 tonnes were not supplied and global prices rose damaging
Egypt's state bread subsidy program, Zlochevsky said.
About three million
tonnes of grain due for export until the end of January were now stuck,
Zlochevsky said.
As a result, Russia
may fail to supply wheat to Egypt's General Authority for Supply Commodities
(GASC), the state buyer of the world's largest wheat importer, in January, he
added.
"Of course, it
includes supplies to GASC. How would we be able to supply it?"
He said shipments
would only be possible if and when the government makes an exception for Egypt.
Mamdouh Abdel Fattah,
GASC's vice chairman told Reuters on Wednesday that trading companies were
obliged to abide by their contracts to ship Russian wheat to Egypt.
GASC purchased
180,000 tonnes of wheat for January shipment, of which 120,000 tonnes for January
11-20 shipment purchased on December 11 and 60,000 tonnes for January 21-31,
bought on Saturday.
"If there will
be no Russian wheat available for Egypt by a government decision then the firms
can proceed to negotiate with GASC to change the origin in the contract,"
a Cairo-based trading source said.
Russia, expected to
be the world's fourth-largest exporter this year, had been exporting record
volumes from a large grain crop of 105 million tonnes.
"What's clear is
that they won't sell anything anymore," a European trader said.
"Now the market
wants to have more details on what the government will do concretely."
Read the article HERE.
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