From back in March but perhaps of interest,
"
Yet, in the meantime produce is a supply and demand business and if produce destined for Moscow won’t be going there — because of restrictions, because there are no boats, because Russian credit is shaky — those items will seek to find other markets. This will lead to price declines and other issues.
How this will all play out is unclear and the war overlays on top of already dynamic changes in the role of Chile and Peru in the Latin American export scene.
We asked Pundit Investigator and Special Projects Editor Mira Slott to find out more:
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https://perishablepundit.com/ukrain...-opportunitygustavo-yentzen-helps-to-find-it/
and,
"
Turkey's fresh fruit and vegetable prices decreased by 50% in the domestic market as exports to Russia and Ukraine, which are among Turkey's top export markets, stopped due to war.
As of Feb. 24, when Russia launched a military operation against Ukraine, export trucks were waiting on the roads for security reasons and many products, especially tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and zucchini, remained unsold. As such, the manufacturers offered their products to the domestic market, and the excess supply was reflected in the prices which fell.
Prices of products such as tomatoes and zucchini, which are among the top fresh vegetable exports of Turkey, have halved after the Russia-Ukraine war. Cucumbers and eggplant, two products with the highest price increase in recent weeks, saw a decrease of more than 50%.
"
https://www.dailysabah.com/business...rop-50-in-turkey-as-ukraine-war-halts-exports
also,
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Guess from where the U.N. World Food Programme sourced more than half of its supplies for the hungry across the globe in 2021? Yes, Ukraine.
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https://www.politico.eu/article/war-in-ukraine-global-food-system-wheat-trade-export/
I guess a question is, what are September's resultant effects from that back in March?