The EU has spilled Ukrainian grain meant for Africa all over itself and desperately needs parental supervision
By: Rachel Marsden
The grain deal, intended to solve food crises in poor countries, is only serving to flood European markets
Remember all the talk about how critical it was to get Ukrainian and Russian
grain shipped out of the country to feed the hungry in Africa and Asia? Well, it
turns out that the EU has used the charity food drive to fill up its own fridge
– and all to the net detriment of its own farmers.
While Ukrainian grains are pouring into the EU, Russian grain and fertilizer
destined for Africa has been blocked by Western sanctions impacting shipping,
insurance, and payments through the SWIFT system from which its Russian
Agricultural Bank has been removed. And although only half of the grain deal is
actively being executed – however poorly and detrimentally – the United Nations
seems unwilling to intervene to rectify its own initiative.
After all the Western pearl-clutching, Russia agreed to a deal last year with
the West to ensure exports of both Russian and Ukrainian grain from the region
via the Black Sea. But it’s starting to look like all the hand-wringing was just
a pretext to get more Ukrainian grain into the EU, with African countries
getting just 1-2% each, according to the United Nations data for the Black Sea
Grain Initiative.
Until recently, anyone even suggesting that Ukrainian grain was largely heading
to the EU was accused of peddling disinformation. As far back as July of 2022,
Polish farmers were worried that, because 80% of the grain coming out of Ukraine
was going through their country, it risked leaking into the Polish market. But
at the time, the Polish Agriculture Minister said that any suggestions of
Ukrainian grain ending up on the Polish market were the result of “information
chaos and the dissemination of false information.” The harm to Polish farmers
turned out to be such very real news that the same agriculture minister has now
resigned over the farmes’ ire, and the EU is now tossing real cash to the tune
of billions of euros at the problem that they’ve created for themselves.
Leave it to the EU to manage parlaying food hogging into a disaster. Well,
for everyone except perhaps Spain, the recipient of 16% of all grain shipments
under the deal, which is reportedly using it to increase its production and
export of pork by feeding the food destined for humans to Spanish pigs.
Other EU farmers now need bailouts. “This is support for the farmers affected by
the increase of imports from Ukraine, not for the consequences of the war,” said
EU Agriculture Commissioner Janus Wojciechowski. “We have a ‘reserve’ for the
crisis and we used only €56 million for the specific situation.” What a bargain!
Only a few tens of billions of euros to fix an entirely self-made problem. Yet
another resounding demonstration of competence by the big-brained Brussels
bureaucrats.
There have been blatant indications for months that the plan was veering towards
disaster. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pointed out in January that 44%
of Ukrainian grain was ending up in the EU. And with their own grains devalued
as a result of their flooded markets, European farmers don’t seem happy about
being made unwitting martyrs for Ukraine. They have been pushed out of their own
markets in order to keep cash from grain sales flowing to Kiev. “In effect,
prices in local/regional markets have dropped causing a significant impact on
farmers’ income. The Commission is not reacting swiftly enough. Our members had
already flagged the concerns about market disruptions last year,” said Paulo
Gouveia, chief policy advisor for the European farmers cooperative, Copa-Cogeca.
Apparently, the farmers just don’t have much of an appreciation for the amount
of time it took for Brussels to amass the massive pile of cash required to
cushion its policy disaster as it circled back and crash-landed on the EU’s own
citizens and economy. Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Slovakia have all
sounded the alarm over the impact of the grain glut. “We have proven through
statistical data and figures that Hungarian farmers are indeed incurring huge
losses because of the grain going through the solidarity lane staying in Hungary
instead of reaching its intended destination,” said Hungarian Agriculture
Minister Istvan Nagy.
Nagy says that Hungarian farmers have lost up to 37% of their income over the
Ukrainian grain, driving down the price of local supply. But the EU initially
denied Hungary’s and Slovakia’s requests for assistance and has only more
recently considered another round of compensation that includes them. Nagy
described the initial choice to exclude them as political, even though Slovakia
has since evoked health concerns related to findings of unauthorized pesticides
on Ukrainian wheat. And now Brussels is paying lip service to their concerns
with another €100 million, which is couch cushion cash for the EU compared to
the billions it regularly tosses around.
All this flooding of the EU with Ukrainian grain could have been avoided if it
had simply ensured that the grain was used for its stated purpose. Russian
President Vlaidmir Putin has been warning all along that the food was being
misdirected. “From August 1, 2022, to March 20, 2023, 827 ships left Ukraine, of
which only 3 million tonnes of grain were sent to Africa and 1.3 million to the
poorest countries in Africa. As I said, almost 45% went to well-fed European
countries, despite the fact that this whole deal was presented under the pretext
of ensuring the interests of African countries,” Putin underscored at the
Russia-Africa Parliamentary Conference in Moscow earlier this year.
Taking matters into their own hands amid persistent supranational incompetence,
Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia recently decided to just ban Ukrainian
agricultural imports outright. It was surprising to see Ukraine’s number one
European cheerleader, Poland, in that mix. Support for Ukraine apparently ended
where political jeopardy for Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party began. Polish
farmers protesting the impact of the Ukrainian imports on their own livelihood
risked becoming a political liability in the Polish general election set for
this fall. Not that Poland’s solidarity with its fellow EU farmers lasted very
long. It ultimately agreed to lift its Ukrainian grain ban, leaving its
neighbors with less leverage to negotiate with Brussels. Surely it’s just a
coincidence that the move comes in the wake of the European Parliament’s largest
party accusing Poland of siding with Russia along with its fellow ban partners,
Hungary and Slovakia.
European governments must not act in detriment to solidarity for Ukraine
during the war. Before unilaterally deciding to block export ways for Ukrainian
goods, we need to have detailed information on why this grain or other products
were not transited further out of Europe and what is the exact amount of the
Ukrainian grain or other products stocked in European warehouses. We also need
to know what the requests are of the protesting farmers in the Member States.
Any unilateral action by Member States will only be a move in favor of Russia,”
said European People’s Party MEP Sandra Kalniete. Ukraine’s Agriculture Ministry
also piled on the pressure. “We understand that Polish farmers are facing a
difficult situation, but we are emphasizing that now the most difficult
situation is for Ukraine’s farmers,” the ministry said.
Apparently Brussels has an endless supply of taxpayer cash to toss at the
problems that it creates for itself, bailing out everyone from farmers to
businesses over its own backfiring efforts to stick it to Russia amid the crisis
in Ukraine. It's becoming increasingly clear that what the EU desperately needs
is some adult supervision, but the available candidates seem few and far
between.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN