BRUSSELS — Ukraine’s grains will continue to enter the European Union tariff-free for another year despite protests from neighbors such as Poland, which have seen their own farmers hurt by the influx of cheaper foodstuffs.
European Union ambassadors meeting in Brussels on Friday agreed to extend the tariff-free access that was put in place a year ago, but with some concessions for Ukraine’s E.U. neighbors affected by the glut of grain. The agreement was announced by Sweden, which is currently chairing the meetings. The European Parliament is set to give formal approval next month.
The lifting of E.U. tariffs was originally conceived as an emergency measure to create cheap, secure land routes to let vital supplies of grains out of Ukraine and alleviate a global food crisis triggered in part by Russia’s blockage of Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea. With Ukraine being one of the world’s largest grains exporters, the inability to get large volumes out by sea threatened to upend global food supplies and deprive Kyiv of a key source of revenue amid Russia’s invasion.
The United Nations and Turkey brokered a deal with Ukraine and Russia that allows vessels to transport grains from Odesa and other Ukrainian ports under close supervision, but that mechanism must be renewed every three months, and Russia said this week that it was considering pulling out of it.
The lifting of E.U. tariffs on Ukrainian grain enabled shipments to enter neighboring countries such as Poland and Hungary by road. But the policy, however well-meaning, backfired for Ukraine’s nearest E.U. neighbors. Tons of Ukrainian grains, significantly cheaper than their E.U. equivalents, flooded neighboring markets and, instead of traveling onward, were stockpiled in warehouses, causing prices in those nations to collapse.
The pain was felt instantly in Poland and other countries, where governments that have supported Ukraine faced protests from farmers, an important political constituency. In recent weeks, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia enacted unilateral bans on Ukrainian food imports in an effort to contain the problem, to the consternation of officials in Kyiv and Brussels.
The move by Poland — whose government has been Ukraine’s staunchest E.U. ally but is also facing elections later this year — to support restrictions on one of the bloc’s most important pro-Ukraine policies illustrated the unintended consequences of the lifting of tariffs, which has threatened to disrupt the bloc’s united front on Ukraine.
On Friday, the four countries that had enacted bans on Ukrainian grain, and Romania, secured several concessions from the European Union in order to agree to the extension of the tariff-free policy, E.U. diplomats familiar with the talks said on Friday after a meeting of ambassadors in Brussels.
Under the agreement, the diplomats said, certain types of Ukrainian grains — among them wheat and sunflower seeds — will only be permitted to transit through those nations on their way to other destinations, not be sold there. Officials hope that this will soften the effects on farmers in Ukraine’s neighboring states.
The countries will also receive 100 million euros ($110 million) from an E.U. emergency fund normally reserved to compensate farmers in case of natural disasters.
Details of the exemptions are being finalized and are likely to be adopted in coming days, E.U. diplomats and officials said.