Russia’s War on Ukraine Worsens Global Starvation
Hulking ships carrying
Ukrainian wheat and other grains are backed up along the Bosporus here in
Istanbul as they await inspections before moving on to ports around the world.
The number of ships
sailing through this narrow strait, which connects Black Sea ports to wider
waters, plummeted when Russia invaded Ukraine 10 months ago and imposed a naval
blockade. Under diplomatic pressure, Moscow has begun allowing some vessels to
pass, but it continues to restrict most shipments from Ukraine, which together
with Russia once exported a quarter of the world’s wheat.
And at the few
Ukrainian ports that are operational, Russia’s missile and drone attacks on
Ukraine’s energy grid periodically cripple the grain terminals where wheat and
corn are loaded onto ships.
An enduring global
food crisis has become one of the farthest-reaching consequences of Russia’s
war, contributing to widespread starvation, poverty and premature deaths.
The United States and
allies are struggling to reduce the damage. American officials are organizing
efforts to help Ukrainian farmers get food out of their country through rail
and road networks that connect to Eastern Europe and on barges traveling up the
Danube River.
But as deep winter
sets in and Russia presses assaults on Ukraine’s infrastructure, the crisis is
worsening. Food shortages are already being exacerbated by a drought in the
Horn of Africa and unusually harsh weather in other parts of the world.
The United Nations
World Food Program estimates that more than 345 million people are suffering
from or at risk of acute food insecurity, more than double the number from
2019.
“We’re dealing now
with a massive food insecurity crisis,” Antony J. Blinken, the U.S. secretary
of state, said last month at a summit with African leaders in Washington. “It’s
the product of a lot of things, as we all know,” he said, “including Russia’s
aggression against Ukraine.”
The food shortages and
high prices are causing intense pain across Africa, Asia and the Americas. U.S.
officials are especially worried about Afghanistan and Yemen, which have been
ravaged by war. Lebanon and other big food-importing nations are finding it
difficult to pay their debts and other expenses because costs have surged. Even
in wealthy countries like the United States and Britain, soaring inflation
driven in part by the war’s disruptions has left poorer people without enough
to eat.
“By attacking Ukraine, the breadbasket of the
world, Putin is attacking the world’s poor, spiking global hunger when people
are already on the brink of famine,” said Samantha Power, the administrator of
the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID.
Ukrainians are
likening the events to the Holodomor, when Joseph Stalin engineered a famine in
Soviet-ruled Ukraine 90 years ago that killed millions.
Mr. Blinken announced
on Dec. 20 that the U.S. government would begin granting blanket exceptions to
its economic sanctions programs worldwide to ensure that food aid and other
assistance kept flowing. The action is intended to ensure that companies and
organizations do not withhold assistance for fear of running afoul of U.S.
sanctions.
State Department
officials said it was the most significant change to U.S. sanctions policy in
years. The United Nations Security Council adopted a similar resolution on
sanctions last month.
But Russia’s
intentional disruption of global food supplies poses an entirely different
problem.
Moscow has restricted
its own exports, increasing costs elsewhere. Most important, it has stopped
sales of fertilizer, needed by the world’s farmers. Before the war, Russia was
the biggest exporter of fertilizer.
Its hostilities in
Ukraine have also had a major impact. From March to November, Ukraine exported
an average of 3.5 million metric tons of grains and oilseeds per month, a steep
drop from the five million to seven million metric tons per month it exported
before the war began in February, according to data from the country’s Ministry
of Agrarian Policy and Food.
That number would be
even lower if not for an agreement forged in July by the United Nations,
Turkey, Russia and Ukraine, called the Black Sea Grain Initiative, in which
Russia agreed to allow exports from three Ukrainian seaports.
Russia continues to
block seven of the 13 ports used by Ukraine. (Ukraine has 18 ports, but five
are in Crimea, which Russia seized in 2014.) Besides the three on the Black Sea,
three on the Danube are operational.
The initial deal was
only for four months but was extended in November for another four months. When
Russia threatened to leave it in October, global food prices surged five to six
percent, said Isobel Coleman, a deputy administrator at USAID.
“The effects of this
war are hugely, hugely disruptive,” she said. “Putin is pushing millions of
people into poverty.”
While increases in the
price of food this past year have been particularly sharp in the Middle East,
North Africa and South America, no region has been immune.
“You’re looking at
price increases of everything from 60 percent in the U.S. to 1900 percent in
Sudan,” said Sara Menker, the chief executive of Gro Intelligence, a platform
for climate and agriculture data that tracks food prices.
Before the war, food
prices had already climbed to their highest levels in over a decade because of
pandemic disruptions in the supply chain and pervasive drought.
The United States,
Brazil and Argentina, key grain producers for the world, have experienced three
consecutive years of drought. The level of the Mississippi River fell so much
that the barges that carry American grain to ports were temporarily grounded.
The weakening of many
foreign currencies against the U.S. dollar has also forced some countries to
buy less food on the international market than in years past.
“There were a lot of structural issues, and
then the war just made it that much worse,” Ms. Menker said.
U.S. officials say the
Russian military has deliberately targeted grain storage facilities in Ukraine,
a potential war crime, and has destroyed wheat processing plants.
Many farmers in
Ukraine have gone to war or fled their land, and the infrastructure that
processed and carried wheat and sunflower oil to foreign markets has broken
down.
At a farm 190 miles
south of Kyiv, 40 of the 350 employees have enlisted in the army. And the farm
is struggling with other shortages. Kees Huizinga, the Dutch co-owner, said
Russia’s attacks on the energy grid have led to the shutdown of a plant that
provides his farm and others with nitrogen fertilizer.
Other fertilizer
plants in Europe were forced to shut down or slow production last year as
natural gas prices soared, a result of the war. Natural gas is critical for
fertilizer production.
“So this year’s
harvest has already been reduced,” Mr. Huizinga said in November. “And if
Russians continue like this, next year’s harvest might even be worse.”
He added that transportation
costs have risen sharply for farmers in Ukraine.
Before the war,
farmers shipped out 95 percent of the country’s wheat and grain exports through
the Black Sea. Mr. Huizinga’s farm paid $23 to $24 per ton to transport its
products to ports and onto ships. Now, the cost has more than doubled, he said.
And an alternative route — by truck to Romania — costs $85 per ton.
Mr. Huizinga said
Russia’s compromise on Black Sea shipments has helped, but he suspects Moscow
is hobbling operations by slowing inspections.
Under the arrangement,
each vessel leaving one of three Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea has to be
inspected by joint teams of Ukrainian, Russian, Turkish and United Nations
employees once the ship reaches Istanbul.
The teams look for any
unauthorized cargo or crew members, and vessels heading to Ukraine need to be
empty of cargo, said Ismini Palla, a spokeswoman for the U.N. office overseeing
the program.
U.N. data shows that
the rate of inspections has dropped in recent weeks. The parties agreed to
deploy three teams each day, Ms. Palla said, adding that the United Nations has
requested more.
“We hope that this
will change soon, so that the Ukrainian ports can operate again at higher
capacity,” she said. “Ukrainian exports remain a vital element in combating
global food insecurity.”
Ms. Palla said the
parties’ decision in November to extend the agreement contributed to a 2.8
percent drop in global wheat prices.
Over the last six
months, food prices have retreated from highs reached this spring, according to
an index compiled by the United Nations. But they remain much higher than in
previous years.
An uncertainty for
farmers this winter is the soaring price of fertilizer, one of their biggest
costs.
Farmers have passed on
the higher cost by increasing the price of food products. And many farmers are
using less fertilizer in their fields. That will result in lower crop yields in
the coming seasons, pushing food prices higher.
Subsistence farms,
which produce nearly a third of the world’s food, are being hit even harder,
Ms. Coleman said.
In a communiqué issued
at the close of their meeting in Bali, Indonesia, in November, leaders of the
Group of 20 nations said they were deeply concerned by the challenges to global
food security and pledged to support the international efforts to keep food
supply chains functioning.
“We need to strengthen
trade cooperation, not weaken it,” Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the director general of
the World Trade Organization, said at the summit.
The U.S. government
spends about $2 billion per year on global food security, and it started a
program called Feed the Future after the last big food crisis, in 2010, that
now encompasses 20 countries.
Since the start of the
Ukraine war, the United States has provided more than $11 billion to address
the food crisis. That includes a $100 million program called AGRI-Ukraine,
which has helped about 13,000 farmers in Ukraine — 27 percent of the total —
gain access to financing, technology, transportation, seeds, fertilizer, bags
and mobile storage units, Ms. Coleman said.
The efforts could help
rebuild the country while alleviating the global food crisis — one-fifth of
Ukraine’s economy is in the agriculture sector, and a fifth of the country’s labor
force is connected to it.
“It’s hugely important
for Ukraine’s economy,” she said, “and for Ukraine’s economic survival.”