Russia widens grain export curbs

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Published: April 16, 2024

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Russia widens grain export curbs

Reuters – Russian authorities have halted grain exports on some ships belonging to Aston, one of the biggest local grain trading houses, two industry sources said. The move widens a quality probe that has already curbed exports of another major trader.

According to sources, Russia’s agricultural watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor has not provided some of the company’s vessels with phytosanitary certificates. One source said two Aston vessels were not given the clearance.

According to data cited by the newspaper Kommersant, Aston exported more than 2.7 million tonnes of grain in the first half of the 2023-24 marketing season, the third-largest volume after Grain Gates and TD RIF.

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Aston did not reply to request for comment.

Rosselkhoznadzor said in late March that there had been an increase in complaints from importing countries about the non-compliance of Russian grain quality with quarantine requirements, including supplies from TD RIF.

“No appeals from other grain exporting companies regarding problems with obtaining a phytosanitary certificate for grain products have been received by Rosselkhoznadzor,” the agency said in response to a Reuters request April 3.

Petr Khodykin, owner of TD RIF, said in late March that his company’s loaded ships could not leave port, estimating the total volume of halted shipments at 400,000 tonnes.

The agency has recently put forward oversight proposals, including tightening control over phytosanitary conditions for grain intended for export.

Russia expects record grain exports of 65 million tonnes this season on the back of a strong harvest and stocks.

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