The European Union plans to reduce quotas for Ukrainian agricultural products, which will mostly affect corn, honey, sugar and poultry.

Published 2025년 5월 15일

Tridge summary

Starting June 6, 2025, the European Union will increase import duties on Ukrainian agricultural products and end special trade privileges, returning to pre-war trade conditions. This decision is due to pressure from Poland and France, who claim their farmers are negatively affected by Ukrainian imports. The duty-free quotas for agricultural products will be significantly reduced, including corn, poultry, and sugar. The European Commission is currently revising the free trade agreement with Ukraine, and if no decision is ready by June 6, transitional measures will be applied. The Ukrainian government fears that this could lead to a loss of €3.5 billion a year.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Starting from June 6, 2025, the European Union will significantly increase import duties on Ukrainian agricultural products and end special trade privileges that allowed the EU to import most Ukrainian goods duty-free, the Financial Times reports. This decision was made under pressure from Poland and France, where farmers complained about lower prices due to Ukrainian imports. Although the EU and Ukraine have a free trade agreement, special measures were introduced after the Russian invasion in 2022, which will end on June 6 and be replaced by “transitional measures” until the parties renew the general agreement. However, these measures will significantly reduce duty-free quotas for agricultural products, in particular for corn - from 4.7 million tons to 650 thousand tons per year, for poultry - from 57.1 to 40 thousand tons, and sugar - from 109 to 40.7 thousand tons. The European Commission has confirmed that the post-war arrangements will not be extended, and work is ...
Source: Graintrade

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