(Reuters) - Russia will increase exports of wheat to Egypt
and imports of other agriculture products from it, Russian officials
said on Tuesday as the two countries discussed the potential for free
trade. The move comes as Russia
seeks new sources of supply after it banned most food imports from the
United States, the European Union, Australia, Canada and Norway last
week in retaliation for Western sanctions over the crisis in Ukraine. "Egypt
has already increased (agricultural) supplies to our market by 30
percent (and) is ready to increase (supplies) by yet another 30 percent
in the near future," Russian President Vladimir Putin said after meeting
with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Increased
Egyptian shipments of products such as potato, onion, garlic and
oranges will compensate for up to half of the shortfall of these
products caused by the ban, Russian Agriculture Minister Nikolai
Fyodorov told reporters in Sochi. Egypt
is the world's biggest wheat importer and the largest buyer of Russian
wheat. The North African country bought 3.6 million tonnes of Russian
wheat in the marketing year to end-June. "Our
partners were interested in opportunities for this year's export,"
Putin told reporters. "For Egypt it will be at least 5-5.5 million
tonnes." Putin did not say
who would supply the additional volumes. Russian grain exports are
dominated by foreign and local non-government trading firms. Putin
and al-Sisi discussed on Tuesday the creation of a free trade zone
between Egypt and the Moscow-led Customs Union of Russia, Belarus and
Kazakhstan, Putin said. They
also discussed the possibility of setting up an Egyptian transport
logistics hub on the Russian Black Sea coast and the creation of a
Russian industrial hub in Egypt as part of its Suez canal development
project. Russia last year
imported $17.2 billion worth of food from the countries covered by the
sanctions, of which $9.2 billion was in the affected categories,
according to the International Trade Centre, a joint venture of the
United Nations and World Trade Organization.
Russia to boost trade with Egypt after Western food ban
![](CustomImage/get/700/500/3589b22bd8e95416cd061ea7.jpeg)
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.