Egypt Supply Minister Expects Wheat Prices to Stabilize

Egyptian workers harvest wheat in the village of Shamma in the Egyptian Nile Delta province of al-Minufiyah. (AFP)
Egyptian workers harvest wheat in the village of Shamma in the Egyptian Nile Delta province of al-Minufiyah. (AFP)
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Egypt Supply Minister Expects Wheat Prices to Stabilize

Egyptian workers harvest wheat in the village of Shamma in the Egyptian Nile Delta province of al-Minufiyah. (AFP)
Egyptian workers harvest wheat in the village of Shamma in the Egyptian Nile Delta province of al-Minufiyah. (AFP)

Egypt, the world’s largest wheat buyer, expects prices to stabilize in the coming months after recent highs driven by uncertainty during the coronavirus pandemic and recent protective measures such as the Russian export quota.

The North African country is one of the main buyers of Russian grain and has looked to bolster its strategic reserves of wheat, which the supply ministry said on Sunday were sufficient to cover five and a half months of consumption.

“We’ve seen highs over the last three months which, in my opinion, are not caused by what we used to say before, such as weak harvests or climate factors, it’s all coming from uncertainty,” Egyptian Supply Minister Ali Moselhy said.

The state grains buyer, the General Authority for Supply Commodities (GASC) raised purchases by almost 40% at the start of its buying season with the supply ministry instructed to keep six months of strategic reserves.

The stocks helped Egypt offset sharp increases in the price of wheat amid high global demand and a looming export tax and quota on Russian wheat, of which Cairo is a main consumer, but GASC purchases slowed slightly in the last quarter of 2020.

Russia, one of the world’s largest wheat exporters, will introduce a quota for overseas shipments of wheat, rye, barley and corn (maize) limiting exports to 17.5 million tonnes for the period Feb. 15-June 30 as well as a wheat export tax of 25 euros ($30.40) per tonne within that period.

The planned levy has triggered volatility in international prices as the market has tried to figure out whether this could curb exports or boost them.

Moselhy said that as vaccines are rolled out and global health conditions improve, the market will stabilize.

“The stocks entering the market are strong this year and at the same time production was not affected so there is no logical reason for prices to keep increasing,” Moselhy added.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ordered authorities to bolster strategic reserves in March as lockdowns imposed to contain the pandemic sparked concerns over food security and disrupted supply chains.

Moselhy said that Egypt’s new commodities exchange to trade rice, vegetable oils and sugar, will participate in the incoming local wheat harvest season starting mid-April.

He said that the exchange will be responsible for clearance, while the government will set the procurement price at which it will purchase wheat from farmers for the state’s food subsidy program.



Russian Gunpowder Factory Attacked, Ukrainian Official Says

A man walks at the site of shelling, which local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on January 10, 2025, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP)
A man walks at the site of shelling, which local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on January 10, 2025, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP)
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Russian Gunpowder Factory Attacked, Ukrainian Official Says

A man walks at the site of shelling, which local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on January 10, 2025, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP)
A man walks at the site of shelling, which local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on January 10, 2025, amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP)

A major Russian gunpowder factory in the Tambov region was attacked, a Ukrainian official said on Thursday, without directly claiming Ukrainian responsibility or specifying the consequences of the attack.

"The enterprise is one of the main suppliers of explosive materials for the army of the Russian Federation," Andriy Kovalenko, the head of Ukraine's Centre for Countering Disinformation, wrote on Telegram of the powder factory.

"With the start of the full-scale war in Ukraine, production at the plant increased significantly," he added, Reuters reported.

There was no immediate public comment from Russia on the attack on the factory.

Separately, Ukraine's military said it had hit the Liskinska oil depot in Russia's Voronezh region overnight.

"According to the available information, at least three strike drones hit the target. A large-scale fire broke out at the facility," a military statement on the Telegram app said.

Russian authorities had said earlier that debris from falling Ukrainian drones had caused a fire at the facility.

Ukraine and Russia have regularly attacked military production facilities deep inside each other's territory in the course of their war.