4.4 • 796 Ratings
🗓️ 7 March 2022
⏱️ 17 minutes
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Food price inflation was already a problem. Could the conflict make things even worse?
Ukraine and Russia are both major food exporters. Tamasin Ford looks at how the war in Ukraine is affecting global prices.
Food price inflation was already a major problem in many parts of the world, and there are fears that the conflict will make matters even worse.
David Beasley, Executive Director of the World Food Programme, says millions of people in Ukraine will now be at risk of food insecurity as a result of the conflict, and fears knock-on effects for countries such as Lebanon, Syria and Tunisia, which are major importers of grains from Ukraine.
Ivanna Dorichenko, managing director of consultancy firm TRADAIDE and an expert in international arbitration, says the situation in Ukraine is devastating, and that much of the country’s agricultural infrastructure has been destroyed by the Russian invasion.
Andrey Sizov, head of research firm SovEcon, is an expert on agriculture in the Black Sea region. He says the war in Ukraine is already paralysing exports , with shipping companies refusing to send vessels into areas potentially disrupted by the conflict
Wandile Sihlobo, chief economist of the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa, says the conflict will have an impact on African countries which buy grains from Ukraine, many of which were already struggling with rising food prices.
(Photo: A sign reading 'Danger Mines' in a wheat field in Nizhyn, Ukraine; Credit: Getty Images)
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0:00.0 | Hello, I'm Tamison Ford. Welcome to Business Daily from the BBC. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has |
0:07.9 | forced exports of grains and oils to grind to a halt. Now with Ukraine being the breadbasket of the |
0:14.8 | world and the impact that it's going to have on the global economy and supply chain disruption |
0:19.3 | for that entire region, you're just creating a crisis on top of a crisis. |
0:23.9 | And just when you think it couldn't get worse, it's getting worse. |
0:27.0 | The region is a massive global supplier of wheat and sunflower oil. |
0:31.4 | Ports are at a virtual standstill and fields are empty of farmers. |
0:36.4 | The man who needs to work on the land, |
0:39.9 | they all are defending our land right now |
0:42.3 | because if they do not defend the land, |
0:45.0 | there'll be nothing to work on at a later stage. |
0:48.0 | In today's Business Daily from the BBC, |
0:49.8 | we find out how the Russian invasion of Ukraine |
0:52.8 | is affecting food prices around the world. |
0:58.1 | Russia and Ukraine produce almost a third of the world's wheat and barley, |
1:03.4 | both staple crops for people across the planet. |
1:06.9 | Ukraine is also the globe's leading exporter of sunflower oil |
1:10.8 | and a major supplier of corn. |
1:13.6 | But since the Russian invasion, Little is coming in or out of ports on the Black Sea. |
1:19.9 | Every night we hear sirens at about 2 to 30. |
1:24.3 | This is not going to end anytime soon. |
1:28.2 | And we are to feel the effect of this for many, many more years to come. |
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