Teetering Ukraine grain deal tops UN-EU talks

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A combine harvests wheat on a field near Novosofiivka village, Mykolaiv region on July 4, 2023. Ukraine was one of the world's top grain producers, and the deal has helped soothe the global food crunch triggered by the conflict. Germany and Ukraine called on July 3, 2023 for the extension of a landmark deal that allows grain from Ukraine to reach the global market, which is set to expire soon. (Photo by Anatolii Stepanov / AFP)

Wheat being harvested from a field in Ukraine's Mykolaiv region on July 4.

PHOTO: AFP

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A crucial deal on Ukrainian grain exports that will

collapse next week if Russia does not agree to renew it

would top United Nations-European Union talks happening outside Brussels, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said.

The talks on Thursday came as Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that “not one” of Moscow’s conditions for the deal to function had been met.

“The ball is in President (Vladimir) Putin’s court” on whether to extend the so-called Black Sea grain deal beyond its expiry next Monday, Dr von der Leyen said, standing next to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

Mr Guterres said the UN’s partnership with the EU on this and other issues was essential to “rebuilding trust with the developing world... and we don’t have a moment to lose”.

“This is when multilateralism is more vital than ever – to bring peace, to protect the planet, to end hunger,” he added.

The

UN’s Black Sea Grain Initiative, struck in July 2022,

expires on Monday unless Mr Putin agrees to extend it – something he has thus far held off saying he would do.

For Moscow, the fate of the agreement is a point of leverage as

it pursues its war in Ukraine.

Moscow has repeatedly threatened to pull out of it because of enduring obstacles to its own exports. “I want to emphasise that nothing was done, nothing at all. It’s all one-sided,” Mr Putin said in a televised interview, adding: “We will think about what to do, we have a few more days.”

The deal, which Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan helped broker, has allowed Ukraine to ship more than 32 million tonnes of grain past Russian warships in the Black Sea.

Much of the grain has gone to feed developing countries in Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere.

If the exports were again blocked, food prices could spiral even higher than they are now.

Dr von der Leyen said the grain issue was “the big topic” on the table for the EU and UN teams at their annual high-level dialogue during a two-day retreat in the town of La Hulpe, south of Brussels.

The EU has organised complementary overland “solidarity lanes” that transport Ukrainian grain into the bloc on its way to other destinations. But the volume is a fraction of what grain freighters can take by sea.

Dr von der Leyen hailed Mr Guterres’ “tireless efforts to prolong the Black Sea Grain Initiative”, adding that “Russia has a responsibility to prolong it, (or) global food insecurity will be the consequence”.

Other issues to be discussed in the EU-UN meeting were Russia’s war in Ukraine, efforts to combat climate change, and developments in the digital economy, especially the need for international “guard rails” on artificial intelligence, Dr von der Leyen and Mr Guterres said. AFP

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