Ukraine crisis spurs USDA wheat pledge

Vilsack addresses effects on exports

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack poses for a photo at the Fruit and Vegetable Market in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Saturday, Feb. 19, 2022. A possible Russian invasion of Ukraine that threatens to cut off agricultural exports from the global grains powerhouse offers American farmers a chance to boost production and prevent supply chain problems, the U.S. secretary of agriculture said Saturday. (AP Photo/Isabel DeBre)
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack poses for a photo at the Fruit and Vegetable Market in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Saturday, Feb. 19, 2022. A possible Russian invasion of Ukraine that threatens to cut off agricultural exports from the global grains powerhouse offers American farmers a chance to boost production and prevent supply chain problems, the U.S. secretary of agriculture said Saturday. (AP Photo/Isabel DeBre)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- American wheat farmers will boost production and prevent supply-chain problems in the event that a possible Russian invasion of Ukraine chokes off agricultural exports from the global grains powerhouse, the U.S. secretary of agriculture said on Saturday.

During a trade mission to the United Arab Emirates, Tom Vilsack told The Associated Press that a conflict in Ukraine would present an "opportunity, obviously, for us to step in and help our partners, help them through a difficult time and situation."

"We'll obviously continue to look for opportunities to expand those [export] markets," Vilsack said from a sprawling fruit and vegetable market in Dubai, which he toured with a delegation of American business owners. "That's the beauty of our system now."

A Russian invasion and blockade of Ukraine could jeopardize the country's crucial wheat exports, which account for 12% of the world's total, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Ukraine is also estimated to supply 16% of the world's corn exports this year. Its grain production has boomed over the last decade.

Last year, the state harvested nearly 33 million metric tons of wheat, the USDA reported, a stark increase from the previous year.

The mounting tensions and militarization along the Russia-Ukraine border, along with pandemic-induced supply chain backlogs and spikes in fertilizer and farm equipment costs, helped push wheat prices last year to their highest level in nearly a decade.

A bushel of wheat was trading in Chicago at over $8 on Saturday -- just below the multi-year high hit last year. The price of a bushel of corn climbed 0.5% on Saturday to exceed $6.50.

The disruption in commodity markets wrought by an invasion would most directly impact the biggest buyers of Ukrainian wheat in South Asia, Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Many countries, like Egypt, depend on wheat imports to provide subsidized bread to impoverished populations. That raises the risk of political and economic turmoil if those countries have to pay more to ship in wheat from the U.S. or farther afield.

"We certainly hope that doesn't happen," Vilsack said of a potential conflict driving up wheat prices. "I wouldn't expect and anticipate that American consumers are necessarily going to see a direct impact, but European consumers, I think that's a different story."

Vilsack was in Dubai to advance an agriculture sustainability initiative and promote American agricultural exports to the UAE, a federation of seven desert sheikhdoms that imports up to 90% of its food.

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