In a deal valued at around $25.7bn, a Russian export firm, EPT grain export company, signed an agreement on 17 October 2023, to supply China with 70 million tons of grains, legumes, and oilseeds.
This news came very soon after the deal announced the previous month between Russia and China to invest in a “land grain corridor” worth $160mn, located between Vladivostok in Russia and the province of Heilongjiang in China. Taken together, these deals have serious implications for both countries, as well as the rest of the world.
Russia is enjoying a bumper wheat harvest in 2023 and, according to the country’s agricultural watchdog, has exported a record 3.5 million tons to China since the beginning of 2023, which was only around 2% of annual imports into the country, and more than the 2.2 million tons exported throughout the whole of 2022.
Wheat production in Russia has grown by over 60% during the past decade, making Russia the top exporter of this grain in the world. Russia accounts for around 14.4% of total wheat exports globally, and Ukraine is not far behind at 9.5%.
Wheat exports from Ukraine had come to a complete halt in the first few months after Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. Joint coordination among several international players led to the Black Sea Grain Deal in July 2022, which created procedures for the safe delivery of wheat from Ukraine through certain routes.
However, that deal expired in July 2023, and Russia said it did not intend to review its position on this matter “until concrete results were achieved, rather than promises and reassurances.”
The objections that Russia voiced include the claim that more than 70% of the exported wheat went to economically advanced countries, while the poorest countries in the world received only 3%. They also claimed that Western companies make unethical profits from the deal.