Ukraine Says Grain on Ships in Blocked Black Sea Ports May Deteriorate

April 17, 2022

© toxicoz / Adobe Stock
© toxicoz / Adobe Stock

Around 1.25 million tonnes of grains and oilseeds are still on commercial vessels blocked in Ukrainian seaports due to Russia's invasion and part of the cargo may deteriorate in the near future, Ukraine's farm minister was quoted as saying on Friday.

Ukraine used to export almost all its grain and oilseeds via seaports and now is forced to find new routes as its ports are blocked.

Before the war, Ukraine exported up to 6 million tonnes of grain and oilseed a month, while in March the exports fell to 200,000 tonnes, Mykola Solskyi told the newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda.

"It (the cargo) is not unloaded, and is still on vessels. There are currently 57 vessels with 1.25 million tonnes of grain and oilseeds," Solskyi said.

"As for the retention period, I think that even the captains themselves in most cases do not know if there are any problems with this. They certainly did not plan to keep this grain on the ships for a long time," he added.

Solskyi said that everything depended on the condition of the holds of the vessels and if the grain is stored for more than three months, "problems arise and part of the cargo can be spoiled."

Ukraine traditionally exports grains to the north Africa and the Middle East and Solskyi said these regions would be forced to spend more money and focus on wheat from non-Ukraine origins.

He said importers were already spending more and the situation with grain supply from Ukraine could push these countries to build greater grain reserves and this would also drive up prices.

"That is, even if this story ended magically tomorrow, the wave of high prices will be another 3 to 5 years, until the mood levels off, and there will be no balance," Solskyi added.


(Reuters - Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; editing by David Evans)

Logistics News

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Iraq wants to increase oil production from the southern fields by 3 million barrels per day within 1-2 months
Judge rules that the wife of Spanish PM must face corruption charges
There are some flights to the Middle East that have resumed but there is still disruption.