According to the newspaper’s report, Polish professor Arkadiusz Artyshak described Ukraine’s grain import volume as shocking. Rzeczpospolita.
“Purchasing companies avoid signing contracts, hoping that from September 15th the ban on grain imports from Ukraine will be lifted and they can buy grain even cheaper,” Artyshak said, describing this trend as shocking.
He explained that even excluding “technical” grain, the amount of wheat grain imported from Ukraine to Poland increased 168 times a year, and corn 300 times.
Formerly Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture spoke for the extension of the grain agreement due to the risk of loss and the paralysis of the grain market in Central Europe.
The head of the department, Istvan Nagy, noted that he was acting in the interests of European countries on behalf of his colleagues in Romania, Bulgaria, Poland and Slovakia. Otherwise, Nagy believes, the European grain market could be paralyzed by cheap grain supplies from Ukraine.
formerly Lavrov said on the actions of Russia in the event of termination of the grain agreement.