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In recent years, Russia and Ukraine have become emerging agricultural powerhouses. Their rise to greater importance has been similar and in parallel. In the early 1990s, during the collapse of the Soviet Union, the two countries combined wheat exports equated to 1.5% of total world trade. Today, they account for nearly 30% of world wheat exports, with Russia making up 18% and Ukraine 10%.
Their importance in world trade extends into feed grains as well. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the combined barley exports of the two countries have gone from below 2% of world trade to exceeding 30%, with both commanding a market share of over 15%. In the case of corn, their combined corn exports amounted to less than 1% of total world exports, and now Ukraine is the fourth largest exporter in the world, shipping over 15% of all exported corn.
When considering vegetable oils, the evolution is even more compelling. Neither country exported rapeseed oil in the early 1990s. Now, they combine for a 15% market share in world trade. Regarding sunflower oil, they now combine to account for more than 75% of all sunflower oil exports, with Ukraine alone amounting to nearly 50%. This compares to combined exports of less than 8% in the early 1990s.
To say these two countries have become an integral part of global agricultural and food commodities trade is no overstatement. The world's food and feed supply have a lot in the balance as this conflict transpires.
In this session, our market experts will outlay their analysis of the impact and forecasts.
DATE: March 10th, 2022
TIME: 2:30 CT
DURATION: 1 hour
Join our APAC session on 11 March, 10:00AM Hong Kong/Singapore.
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