Four more grain ships leave Ukraine amid delayed arrival of first cargo     

Russia and Ukraine together once accounted for nearly a third of global wheat exports.
Four more grain ships leave Ukraine amid delayed arrival of first cargo     

The cargo ship Razoni: First grain ship leaving  Ukraine last week under a UN-brokered deal last week has been delayed arriving in Lebanon           

Four more ships carrying almost 170,000 tonnes of corn and other foodstuffs sailed from Ukrainian Black Sea ports on Sunday under a deal to unblock the country's exports after Russia's invasion, Ukrainian and Turkish officials have said.

The United Nations and Turkey brokered the agreement last month after warnings that the halt in grain shipments caused by the conflict could lead to severe food shortages and even outbreaks of famine in parts of the world. Ukrainian infrastructure minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said there were plans to step up shipments still further.

"We are gradually moving on to larger volumes of work," he said. 

We plan to ensure the ability of the ports to handle at least 100 vessels per month in the near future."

Ukraine would soon also start exporting grain from its Black Sea port of Pivdennyi, an expansion that would let it send out a total of at least 3m tonnes of goods a month, the minister said on Facebook.

Delays 

However, the first ship to leave a Ukrainian port under the deal would not arrive on Sunday in Lebanon as planned, the Ukrainian embassy in Lebanon said. 

The Razoni left Odesa last week carrying 26,527 tonnes of corn. The embassy told Reuters the ship was "having a delay" and "not arriving today", with no details on a new arrival date or the cause of the delay.

Before the invasion, Russia and Ukraine together accounted for nearly a third of global wheat exports. In peacetime, Ukraine exported up to 6m tonnes of grain from its Black and Azov seaports every month.

The resumption of grain exports is being overseen by a joint co-ordination centre in Istanbul where Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and UN personnel are working.

The first cargo ship left Ukraine under the agreement on Monday last week, and another three followed on Friday.

The Istanbul centre said late on Saturday it had authorised five new vessels to pass through the Black Sea corridor: four vessels outbound from Ukraine's Chornomorsk and Odesa ports, carrying 161,084 metric tonnes of foodstuffs, and one heading into Ukraine to pick up grain.

The ships that left Ukrainian ports included Glory, with a cargo of 66,000 tonnes of corn bound for Istanbul, and Riva Wind, loaded with 44,000 tonnes of corn, heading for Turkey's Iskenderun, the Turkish defence ministry said.

It said the other two vessels that left Ukraine were Star Helena, with a cargo of 45,000 tonnes of meal heading to China, and Mustafa Necati, carrying 6,000 tonnes of sunflower oil and heading for Italy.

Later on Sunday, Ukraine's Infrastructure Ministry said the bulk carrier Fulmar S, which had reached the Black Sea port of Chornomorsk on Saturday — the first foreign-flagged ship to arrive in Ukraine since the conflict — was ready for loading. 

The Istanbul centre said it had nearly finished drafting procedures to implement the grain deal and they would be published in days.

It added that it had also authorised the movement, pending inspection, of Osprey S, inbound for Chornomorsk. That ship is currently at anchorage northwest of Istanbul.

The Turkish Defence Ministry said the centre had completed inspections of the ship Rojen carrying 13,000 tonnes of corn to Britain, Polarnet which is taking 12,000 tonnes of corn to a Turkish port, and Osprey S, which is heading to Ukraine.

On Saturday, the JCC completed its inspection of Navistar, the other one of three vessels that left Ukrainian ports on Friday. 

Reuters

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