Greece offers ships to export grain from blocked Ukrainian ports, NATO says

Commercial maritime superpower says it has “special role” to play in effort

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: July 7, 2022

Greece offers ships to export grain from blocked Ukrainian ports, NATO says

Greece is willing to provide ships to help export grain from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports that have been blocked by Russia, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said June 29.

Ukraine is one of the top global wheat suppliers, but shipments have been halted by Russia’s invasion, causing global food shortages. The United Nations has appealed to both sides, as well as maritime neighbour Turkey, to agree to a corridor.

“Greece announced that they are ready to make available ships to get the grain out of Ukraine,” Stoltenberg told reporters on the third and last day of a NATO summit in Madrid.

Read Also

Food items show maple leaves and other Canadian sourcing claims on their packaging, but not all those labels convey the same level of Canadian involvement in that product's value chain. Photo: Alexis Stockford

Unclear food labels hinder Canada’s ‘buy local’ surge

“Maple-washing” on Canadian food packaging makes label claims hard to keep straight and hurts both farmers and consumers trying to buy Canadian, economist says.

NATO member Turkey has held direct talks with Moscow and the United Nations on the plan and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said from Madrid that he hoped diplomacy would help solve the issues around Ukraine’s grain exports.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said his country “has a special role to play in this effort as it controls the world’s largest merchant fleet.

“Greece, once again, is offering to help and support any effort made, under the auspices of the United Nations, in order for the grain currently trapped in Ukraine, primarily in Odessa, to leave Ukraine and eventually end up in the countries that need it today,” Mitsotakis told reporters.

About the author

Reuters

Freelance Contributor

explore

Stories from our other publications