Middle Eastern Countries on Brink of Wheat Crisis

The destroyed silo sits in rubble and debris after an explosion at the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon, on August 5, 2020. (AP)
The destroyed silo sits in rubble and debris after an explosion at the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon, on August 5, 2020. (AP)
TT

Middle Eastern Countries on Brink of Wheat Crisis

The destroyed silo sits in rubble and debris after an explosion at the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon, on August 5, 2020. (AP)
The destroyed silo sits in rubble and debris after an explosion at the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon, on August 5, 2020. (AP)

Since the eruption of the Russian-Ukrainian tensions, fears have emerged that the global wheat and grain markets will be severely affected, given that the two countries secure an important part of global exports.

Russia and Ukraine account for 29% of world wheat exports, 19% of corn exports, and 80% of global exports of sunflower oil.

Since the launch of Russia's invasion against Ukraine on Thursday, wheat prices on the Chicago Stock Exchange have risen to their highest level in nine and a half years, while the conflict threatens to disrupt the flow of supplies from the region.

Meanwhile, European wheat futures jumped to a record peak, and wheat prices reached 344 euros per ton at the Euronext group, which operates a number of European stock exchanges.

Ukraine is a major exporter of corn, most of which goes to China and the European Union. Russia is also competing in supplying wheat to major buyers, such as Egypt and Turkey.

An adviser to the Ukrainian president’s chief aide said the army suspended commercial shipping in Ukrainian ports after Russian forces invaded the country, fueling fears of supply disruption.

Officials and sources in the grain sector had previously said Russia also indefinitely suspended the movement of commercial ships in the Azov Sea, but kept its ports on the Black Sea open to navigation.

In the midst of this political dilemma, the countries of the Middle East, mainly Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq and the Maghreb countries, are threatened with a serious problem, as their major reliance on Ukrainian and Russian wheat would be difficult to compensate from other markets.

Lebanon faces a severe crisis

Lebanon had lost its grain storage capacity since the massive explosion that rocked the port of Beirut in August 2020 and destroyed the wheat silos.

On Friday, Lebanese Economy Minister Amin Salam told Reuters that wheat reserves were sufficient for one month at most, adding that he was seeking to conclude import agreements from different countries amid market concerns over the Ukrainian crisis.

He added that Lebanon, which imports nearly 60% of its wheat from Ukraine, was in talks with other countries including the United States and India to import wheat.

“We don’t want to create a state of panic, we have positive indicators,” the minister told Reuters.

Earlier on Friday, Georges Berbari, the ministry’s general director of grains and sugar beets, told Reuters that Lebanon’s wheat reserves were enough for 1.5-2 months.

Two wheat shipments headed for Lebanon were being loaded in Ukraine, but they have been delayed by the war, he revealed.

Distress call from Yemen

The World Food Program (WFP) warned on Thursday that the war in Ukraine would likely increase fuel and food prices in war-torn Yemen, which could push more residents into starvation as aid funding dwindles.

The WFP has had to cut food rations for eight million people in Yemen, as the seven-year war between the government and the Iran-backed Houthi militias has pushed the country to the brink of famine.

“The escalation of conflict in Ukraine is likely to further increase fuel and food prices and especially grains in the import-dependent country,” said a WFP statement on Thursday.

It added: “Food prices have more than doubled across much of Yemen over the past year, leaving more than half of the country in need of food assistance.”

“We have no choice but to take food from the hungry to feed the starving and, unless we receive immediate funding, in a few weeks we risk not even being able to feed the starving,” the WFP statement cited WFP Executive Director David Beasley as saying.

“This will be hell on earth,” he warned.

A daunting task

In Egypt, the most populous Arab state and the world’s biggest importer of wheat, the authorities will scramble to find urgent alternatives to feed 100 million citizens, with the country importing about 40% of its needs from Russia and Ukraine.

However, multi-pronged moves are likely to solve the crisis, including the local expansion of wheat cultivations and diversification of imports, in addition to having reasonable reserves that are enough for six months.

Moreover, the country’s local production is sufficient to produce daily bread, Dr. Saad Nassar, economist and advisor to the Egyptian Ministry of Agriculture, told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Egypt’s state grains buyer, the General Authority for Supply Commodities (GASC), cancelled its international purchasing tender on Thursday because of a lack of offers. The Authority received one offer at $399 a ton for 60,000 tons of French wheat on a free-on-board (FOB) basis in its international tender on Thursday, traders said.

Reassuring messages

In Tunisia, the Ministry of Agriculture revealed the availability of sufficient grain stock to cover local needs until next May.

Abdel Sattar Fihri, Director of Supply at the Grain Office, said that about 80% of Tunisia’s grain imports came from Russia and Ukraine, which necessitates taking precautionary measures as the crisis could last long and impact shipments.

He added that the Ministry of Agriculture had ordered a search for other markets, such as Bulgaria, Romania, Uruguay and Argentina, for new bid requests, and to avoid Russia and Ukraine during this period.

Similarly, a spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of Trade said on Thursday that his country has a sufficient strategic stock of wheat from its purchases from local farmers, adding that he was not worried about reserves. But he added that Iraq might resort to the market to buy wheat if the crisis between Russia and Ukraine is prolonged.



Iraq State Oil Firm Reaffirms Deal Obliging Oil Companies in Kurdistan to Hand over Output

A handout picture released by Iraq's Prime Minister's Media Office on January 2, 2025, shows a partial view of the oil refinery of Baiji north of Baghdad, during the inauguration ceremony of the fourth and fifth units. (Iraqi Prime Minister's Media Office / AFP)
A handout picture released by Iraq's Prime Minister's Media Office on January 2, 2025, shows a partial view of the oil refinery of Baiji north of Baghdad, during the inauguration ceremony of the fourth and fifth units. (Iraqi Prime Minister's Media Office / AFP)
TT

Iraq State Oil Firm Reaffirms Deal Obliging Oil Companies in Kurdistan to Hand over Output

A handout picture released by Iraq's Prime Minister's Media Office on January 2, 2025, shows a partial view of the oil refinery of Baiji north of Baghdad, during the inauguration ceremony of the fourth and fifth units. (Iraqi Prime Minister's Media Office / AFP)
A handout picture released by Iraq's Prime Minister's Media Office on January 2, 2025, shows a partial view of the oil refinery of Baiji north of Baghdad, during the inauguration ceremony of the fourth and fifth units. (Iraqi Prime Minister's Media Office / AFP)

Iraq's state oil company, SOMO, reiterated on Sunday its commitment to its oil export deal with the Kurdish regional government ‌which obliges ‌global ‌oil companies ⁠operating in ‌the region to hand over their production of crude oil to the company.

SOMO ⁠made the remarks ‌in response to ‍a ‍Reuters report published ‍in September which quoted Norway's DNO as saying it had no immediate plans to ship ⁠oil through the Iraq-Türkiye pipeline which restarted after a more than two-year halt following a deal between Baghdad and the Kurdish ‌regional government.


How 2025 Decisions Redrew the Future of Riyadh’s Real Estate Market

Construction is seen at a real estate project in Riyadh. (SPA)
Construction is seen at a real estate project in Riyadh. (SPA)
TT

How 2025 Decisions Redrew the Future of Riyadh’s Real Estate Market

Construction is seen at a real estate project in Riyadh. (SPA)
Construction is seen at a real estate project in Riyadh. (SPA)

The Saudi capital underwent an unprecedented structural shift in its real estate market in 2025, driven by a forward-looking agenda led by Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Crown Prince and Prime Minister. Far from incremental regulation, the year’s measures amounted to a deep corrective overhaul aimed at dismantling long-standing distortions, breaking land hoarding, expanding affordable housing supply, and firmly rebalancing landlord-tenant relations.

Together, the decisions ended years of speculation fueled by artificial scarcity and pushed the market toward maturity, one grounded in real demand, fair pricing, and transparency.

Observers dubbed 2025 a “white revolution” for Saudi real estate. The reforms severed the link between property and short-term speculation, restoring housing as a sustainable residential and investment product. Below is a detailed outline of the most significant of these historic decisions:

1- Unlocking land, boosting supply

In March, authorities lifted restrictions on sale, subdivision, development permits, and planning approvals for 81 million square meters north of Riyadh. A similar decision in October freed another 33.24 million square meters to the west.

The Royal Commission for Riyadh City was also mandated to deliver 10,000 - 40,000 fully serviced plots annually at subsidized prices capped at SAR 1,500 per square meter, curbing price manipulation and offering real alternatives for citizens.

2- Rent controls and contractual fairness

To stabilize households and businesses, the government froze annual rent increases for residential and commercial leases in Riyadh for five years starting in September. Enforced through the upgraded “Ejar” platform, the move halted arbitrary hikes while aligning growth with residents’ quality of life.

3- Tougher fees

An improved White Land Tax took effect in August, extending beyond vacant plots to include unoccupied built properties. Annual fees rose to as much as 10% of land value for parcels of 5,000 square meters or more within urban limits, raising the cost of land hoarding and incentivizing prompt development.

4- Investment openness and digital governance

A revised foreign ownership regime allowed non-Saudis - individuals and companies - to own property in designated zones under strict criteria, injecting international liquidity. Transparency was reinforced by the launch of the “Real Estate Balance” platform, providing real-time price indicators based on actual transactions and curbing phantom pricing.

5- Quality and urban standards

Policy shifted from quantity to quality with mandatory application of the Saudi Building Code and sustainability standards for all new developments, ensuring long-term operational value and preventing low-quality sprawl.

Structural shift

Sector specialists told Asharq Al-Awsat the measures represent a qualitative leap in market management, moving Riyadh from a scarcity and speculation-led cycle to a balanced market governed by genuine demand, efficient land use, disciplined contracts, and transparent indicators.

Khaled Al-Mobid, CEO of Menassat Realty Co., said the reforms were timely and corrective after years of rapid price escalation. He noted early positives: slowing price growth, a return to realistic negotiations, increased supply in some districts, and better-quality offerings focused on intrinsic value rather than quick appreciation.

Abdullah Al-Moussa, a real estate expert and broker, described the steps as addressing root causes, not symptoms.

He observed a behavioral shift, especially in northern Riyadh, from “hold and wait” to reassessment, alongside calmer price momentum, renewed interest in actual development, and clearer rental dynamics.

Saqr Al-Zahrani, another market expert, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the reforms tackled structural imbalances by breaking artificial scarcity created by undeveloped land banks.

Opening vast tracts north and west and introducing market-wide indicators restored “organized abundance,” aligning prices with real demand and purchasing power without heavy-handed intervention, he remarked.

He added that recent months have seen weaker demand for raw land and stalled auctions, contrasted with rising interest in off-plan sales and partnerships with developers.

Banks, too, have reprioritized toward projects with operational viability, lifting overall supply quality despite a temporary slowdown in some transactions.

Consumers, meanwhile, are showing greater patience and interest in self-build options, signaling a maturing market awareness.

Outlook

Experts expect the effects to continue through 2027, delivering broad price stability with limited corrections in overheated locations rather than sharp declines.

Homeownership, especially among young buyers, is projected to rise as capital shifts from land speculation to long-term development.

The 2025 decisions were not short-term fixes but the launch of a new social and economic trajectory for Riyadh’s property market, redefining real estate as a housing service and value-adding investment, not a speculative vessel.

As Riyadh advances toward becoming one of the world’s ten largest city economies, its real estate reset offers a model for aligning regulation with quality of life, transparency, and sustainable growth.


Deal to Export Oil from Kurdish Region to Continue with No Issues, Kurdish Rudaw Reports

A staff at an oilfield holds the flag of Kurdistan. (X)
A staff at an oilfield holds the flag of Kurdistan. (X)
TT

Deal to Export Oil from Kurdish Region to Continue with No Issues, Kurdish Rudaw Reports

A staff at an oilfield holds the flag of Kurdistan. (X)
A staff at an oilfield holds the flag of Kurdistan. (X)

Kurdistan broadcaster Rudaw quoted the ​vice president of Iraq's state oil company SOMO as saying ‌on Saturday that ‌the ‌oil ⁠export ​deal ‌between Baghdad and Erbil is set to be renewed with ⁠out issues, Reuters reported.

In September, ‌Iraq restarted ‍the ‍export of ‍oil from its Kurdish region to Türkiye after ​an interruption of more ⁠than two years following a deal between Baghdad and the Kurdish regional government.