Turkey and Egypt remain the largest importers of Russian grain

Published 2021년 9월 30일

Tridge summary

The II International Conference Baltic Grain held on September 29, 2021, in St. Petersburg saw Anita Milekhina, Director of the St. Petersburg branch of the FSBI Grain Quality Assessment Center, discuss the dynamics of grain exports from Russia and the Baltic region. She highlighted that traditional export markets, including the Middle East and North Africa, remained strong, with Egypt and Turkey as leading importers. Additionally, Russia saw increased demand from South Asian countries, especially Bangladesh and Pakistan. The Baltic region also experienced a 45% increase in grain and grain product exports, reaching 135.4 thousand tons, and expanding the product range to 55 names, with countries like Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands as the main recipients. The conference aimed to explore the potential of grain cargo export from Russia and Kazakhstan through the Baltic Sea ports.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

This information was announced by Anita Milekhina, Director of the St. Petersburg branch of the FSBI Grain Quality Assessment Center, during her speech at the II International Conference Baltic Grain, which took place on September 29 in St. Petersburg. “The geography of Russian grain exports in the 2020/21 agricultural year has not undergone significant changes. The traditional markets for us are the countries of the Middle East (18.6 million tons) and North Africa (11 million tons), which are largely dependent on food imports and see Russia as a reliable partner in this regard. Turkey (8.4 million tons) and Egypt (8.2 million tons) remain the largest importers here. But at the same time, one cannot fail to note Saudi Arabia, which imported a record 2.7 million tons of Russian grain, Tunisia, in the direction of which exports increased sevenfold to 0.7 million tons, and Algeria, which finally imported Russian wheat in the last decade of June (28.5 thousand . T). South Asian ...
Source: Zol

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