Food ban, population influx seen boosting Russia grain demand

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: September 16, 2014

, ,

Moscow | Reuters — Russia’s ban on most Western food, the assimilation of the disputed Crimea region and people fleeing conflict in Ukraine are set to boost Russian grain demand this year, SovEcon, one of the country’s leading agriculture consultancies, said.

Russia, expected to be the world’s third-largest wheat exporter this year, is harvesting a near-record grain crop against a backdrop of worsening relations with Western countries over the crisis in Ukraine.

The European Union and the U.S. have imposed sanctions over Moscow’s support for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine and the annexation in early 2014 of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

Read Also

Photo: Getty Images Plus

Alberta crop conditions improve: report

Varied precipitation and warm temperatures were generally beneficial for crop development across Alberta during the week ended July 8, according to the latest provincial crop report released July 11.

Russia banned most Western food imports in early August. This, together with an influx of people due to the Ukrainian crisis, will now cause a rare increase in Russia’s generally flat domestic grain demand, the SovEcon consultancy said.

“Domestic demand is a major factor (for exports this year),” Andrey Sizov, the head of SovEcon, told a conference in Moscow on Tuesday.

The Kremlin has banned food imports, including meat, worth about $9 billion from the EU, the U.S., Canada, Australia and Norway, in its strongest response to sanctions so far.

The government is considering measures to boost domestic meat production, which would trigger further growth in pig stocks and, thus, domestic demand for feed grain, Sizov said.

“The second factor is the growth in Russia’s population thanks to Crimea – about two million people — and thanks to refugees from Ukraine — about one million people,” he added. “All these people consume bread products.”

Russia had a population of about 143.7 million people in early 2014, according to its statistics service.

SovEcon expects 2014-15 domestic grain demand in Russia to reach 71 million tonnes, up from 67 million a year ago. Its domestic wheat demand is expected to rise by 1.5 million tonnes to 36.5 million tonnes, the consultancy said.

Despite rising domestic demand, Russia’s 2014-15 grain exports will still be able to reach a record 30.5 million tonnes, including flour, it added. In a previous forecast it pegged exports at 28.5 million tonnes in the current marketing year that started on July 1.

Options

In late August Russia’s agriculture ministry said in a letter addressed to Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev that export restrictions could be an option if exports exceeded 26.9 million tonnes of grain out of an expected crop of 100 million tonnes this year.

However, officials said the government was not considering an export ban and that the letter included a list of options related to monitoring the grain market situation, not proposals.

SovEcon on Tuesday said it was also raising Russia’s wheat export forecast to 22.5 million tonnes from the 22 million tonnes previously forecast and added that the Russian government was likely to be able to buy about 3 million tonnes of grain from the domestic market for state stocks.

Russia is expected to be world No. 3 wheat exporter in the 2014-15 marketing year after the EU and U.S., according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

SovEcon sees the 2014 grain crop at 105 million tonnes, the second-largest grain crop in Russia’s post-Soviet history and the largest in six years. Russia harvested a record 108 million tonnes of grain in 2008.

The consultancy expects Russia’s 2014-15 barley crop to reach 19.8 million tonnes, with 3.5 million tonnes available for export and the maize crop at 11.8 million tonnes, with exports of 3.7 million tonnes.

— Reporting for Reuters by Polina Devitt in Moscow.

explore

Stories from our other publications