Russia Starts Wheat Shipments to Brazil from Baltic Terminal

Friday, June 7, 2024

Russia has started wheat shipments to Brazil from Vysotsky Port on the Baltic Sea, the quality inspection arm of Russia's agricultural watchdog said on Friday.

"Grain was shipped to Brazil from Russian Baltic Sea ports for the first time," the grain quality assessment centre said.

It said a 31,000-ton shipment of wheat had undergone quality checks and was shipped at the start of June.

The grain terminal at Vysotsky Port, 50 km (30 miles) from the Russian-Finnish border, started shipments in April 2023 with the first cargo going to Tunisia. The planned capacity of the terminal is 4 million tonnes per year.

Shipments from the Baltic are intended to relieve pressure on grain terminals on the Azov and Black Seas which are operating at maximum capacity amid record exports this season.

Russia estimates grain exports in the current 2023/24 season at 70 million tonnes. Brazil is a major buyer, with wheat exports to that country totaling 929,000 tons in 2023, according to the Russian agriculture ministry.


(Reuters - Reporting by Olga Popova; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Categories: Europe South America Cargo Dry Bulk

Related Stories

ContainerWheels 2-in-1: Patented System Aims to Simplify Container Handling

Shipbuilding: ONE Singapore Joins the Fleet

Baltic Index Nits Near Two-Week Low

Current News

Mitsui OSK: Shipping in the Gulf Continues, Closely Monitoring Situation

Marine Fuel Sales at Fujairah Port Hit Three-Month Low

ContainerWheels 2-in-1: Patented System Aims to Simplify Container Handling

Shipbuilding: ONE Singapore Joins the Fleet

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News