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UN chief urges Russia to revive grain deal, warning ‘the most vulnerable’ will suffer

By Frances D’emilio The Associated Press

ROME—The UN chief on Monday urged Russia to resume the internationally brokered deal so that grain can be shipped from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, saying that otherwise, the world’s most vulnerable among the hungry will suffer the worst consequences.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres made the appeal during a speech in Rome at the opening of a three-day food summit.

With the recent collapse of the Ukraine-Russia grain deal, “the most vulnerable will pay the highest price,’’ Guterres said. He lamented that there are already negative effects on global wheat and corn prices.

Wheat prices have risen more than 14 percent since Monday, when Russia pulled out of the grain deal, and corn prices are up more than 10 percent.

Both Russia and Ukraine are “essential to global food security,’’ the UN leader said. He noted that they have historically accounted for 30 percent of global wheat and barley exports, a fifth of all maize and more than half of all sunflower oil.

“For my part, I remain committed to facilitating unimpeded access to global markets for food products and fertilizer from both Ukraine and the Russian Federation and to deliver the food security every person deserves,’’ Guterres said.

“I call on the Russian Federation to return to the implementation of the Black Sea Initiative, in line with my latest proposal,” Guterres said, urging the international community to stand united to find solutions for the issue.

Russia’s refusal to renew the accord triggered the deal’s collapse earlier this month. It said the Black Sea Initiative would be suspended until demands to get Russian exports of food and fertilizer to the world are met.

The accord had been brokered by the United Nations and Turkey as a way to keep grain flowing to developing countries, especially in Africa and the Middle East, despite the war unleashed by Moscow against Ukraine in February 2022.

When the grain deal was struck, the UN World Food Program regained a top supplier, allowing 725,000 metric tons of humanitarian food aid to leave Ukraine and reach countries on the brink of famine, including Ethiopia, Afghanistan and Yemen.

The deal’s suspension as well as Russian attacks on the Black Sea ports of Ukraine have irked Russian ally China and as well as developing nations heavily dependent on the shipments to feed their people.

Besides the grain deal, the effects of climate change on food production and distribution will figure in discussions at the Rome summit.

“We need food systems that can help end this senseless war on our planet,’’ Guterres said. “Transformation means new, sustainable food systems that can reduce the carbon footprint of food processing, packaging and transportation.’’

Such transformation also demands that governments and businesses “take stronger and faster action to tackle the climate crisis and deliver environmental and climate justice,’’ he added.

Pacific island nations are particularly vulnerable to rising sea levels caused by climate change.

“We need to be able to grow what we eat and eat what we grow,’’ Samoa Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa told the summit. “But that simple construct is so far reaching and presupposes that we can adequately support the actions that lead to the right outcome.”

“It is not too late to protect what we have,” she said. “All it requires is determination and tenacity. Climate action must be at the forefront of all our endeavors.”

The way food is grown and produced is contributing to climate change, weakening the agriculture-food system, according to Corinna Hawkes, director of the division of food systems and food safety at the Rome-based UN Food and Agriculture Organization, which is hosting the summit.

The gathering aims to take stock of progress and setbacks since the first food systems summit was held in 2021.

According to FAO, the summit has drawn participants from 161 countries, including 22 heads of state or government, and 150 non-governmental organizations.

Russian attack on port highlights risk to Ukraine’s last grain export route

By Áine Quinn, Kateryna Choursina & Daryna Krasnolutska

WHEAT and corn prices surged after Russia attacked one of Ukraine’s biggest Danube river ports, ramping up the risks facing Kyiv’s last major grain export route and global food trade.

A drone attack overnight hit the Danube port of Reni, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named discussing sensitive information. Ukraine’s southern operational military command earlier said on Facebook that a grain hangar at a Danube port had been ruined, without specifying which one or giving details.

Wheat futures for September delivery settled up 8.6 percent in Chicago on Monday, by the daily exchange price limit, at $7.5750 per bushel. Corn contracts for December closed up 6 percent at $5.6825 per bushel, the highest level in nearly a month.

Reni, along with Izmail, is one of Ukraine’s biggest river ports for grain and is located on the Danube at the border with Romania. Local traders had been expanding capacity there in response to Russia’s sea blockade.

The attack was the latest in a series of moves by Russia to stifle Ukrainian exports, which have historically made an important contribution to global food supply. The collapse of the Black Sea grain deal last week—blocking Ukraine’s maritime corridor—and Russia’s subsequent attacks on Odesa ports spurred expectations that Kyiv will have to double down on alternative routes, the most obvious being the Danube.

While it’s unclear how far the attacks will impact exports from Reni, the strikes increase operational risks. Seven people were injured by a Russian overnight drone attack on port infrastructure in the Odesa region, Governor Oleh Kiper said on Telegram. Five of them were hospitalized. Reni is located in that region. With assistance from Olesia Safronova, Christian Wienberg, Irina Vilcu and Gerson Freitas Jr./Bloomberg

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