UKRAINE – The European Commission has announced plans to impose tariffs on egg imports from Ukraine by early July, following the breach of an agreed annual import threshold.
This decision is part of broader measures to regulate agricultural imports from Ukraine, which had been granted free-trade access to bolster its economy after the Russian invasion in 2022.
However, this policy has sparked discontent among EU farmers and triggered significant rural protests.
Earlier this week, the EU’s executive branch revealed its intention to introduce tariffs on Ukrainian oat imports as well, having reached the volume ceiling for this commodity.
The surge in Ukrainian egg imports has been particularly notable, with EU data indicating a 75% increase last year, continuing to climb in the early months of this year.
Ukraine has emerged as the EU’s leading supplier of eggs, exacerbating concerns within the European egg industry.
European egg producers argue that the influx of less expensive Ukrainian eggs has hindered their recovery from recent bird flu outbreaks, which devastated poultry populations.
This industry’s woes are part of a larger issue, as the EU’s restrictions on Ukrainian agricultural imports also encompass poultry, sugar, groats, maize, and honey.
The Ukrainian Agriculture Ministry has refrained from commenting on the forthcoming egg tariffs, and the Ukrainian union of egg producers has not issued a statement.
In contrast, the EU’s latest data reveals that while Ukraine has announced a halt on sugar exports to the EU for the remainder of the year, nearly 44,000 metric tons of sugar imports remain available out of a total quota of approximately 263,000 tons.
Despite the challenges, Ukraine’s egg industry remains resilient.
In 2022, the country produced around 11.9 billion hen eggs, although this marked a significant decline from the previous year’s 14.1 billion.
The peak production was recorded in 2013, with 19.6 billion eggs.
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