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EU agrees new limits on Ukraine farm imports

Posted on March 20, 2024 By admin


Negotiators for the European Parliament and the Belgian EU presidency agreed to add oats, maize, honey and other products to the import list from Ukraine, while keeping limits. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The European Union reached a provisional agreement on March 20 to grant Ukrainian food producers tariff-free access to its markets until June 2025, albeit with new limits on imports of grains.

In January, the European Commission proposed to suspend duties and quotas on Ukrainian farm produce for a further year, with an “emergency brake” for poultry, eggs and sugar leading to tariffs if imports exceed the average levels of 2022 and 2023. However, after months of protests from farmers over EU environmental rules and cheap imports, EU lawmakers pushed to extend the emergency list to other farm produce and add 2021 as a reference year. This was before the Russia-Ukraine war, when the EU imposed tariffs and quotas on Ukrainian imports.


Also read: Why are farmers protesting in Europe? | Explained

Negotiators for the European Parliament and the Belgian EU presidency agreed in the early hours of Wednesday to add oats, maize, groats and honey to the list, while keeping the limit as the average of 2022 and 2023 imports.

Negotiators ensured the Commission would act within 14 days, instead of an initially envisaged 21 days, if trigger levels were reached. They also added a commitment from the Commission to monitor imports of Ukrainian wheat and other cereals and to take action if they disrupt EU markets.

Impact of Russia-Ukraine war on EU’s farm imports

Ukraine’s EU neighbours — Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia — have complained that the farm imports have upset their producers, leading to farmer protests and import bans. Shipments into those countries increased after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine hindered exports via the traditional Black Sea route.

Kyiv has said its farm exports are not damaging EU markets, particularly now that about 95% of Ukraine’s agricultural exports go via the Black Sea. It has also said the EU’s emergency brake based on average imports of 2022 and 2023 was acceptable, but that adding 2021 would have been unworkable.

Wednesday’s provisional agreement will need the approval of the European Parliament and EU governments.



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