Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/24/2012

EU Potash Producers Give Russia Warning

Reuters

BRUSSELS — Potash producers in Spain, Germany and Britain will ask the European Union executive body to keep in place trade barriers to limit rival imports from Belarus and Russia, an industry official said Friday.

German minerals firm K+S and the Spanish and British operations of Israel Chemicals — represented by a European producers' group — will say keeping import duties in place on Russian and Belarussian potash rather than letting them expire is essential to protect Europe's remaining producers from unfair export pricing.

Soaring global demand for crops to be used for food and bio-fuels has made potash fertilizer a sought-after commodity and triggered an international scramble for secure supplies.

"The European Potash Producers Association is in the last stage of writing the request for an [import duties] extension and will certainly lodge it by next Wednesday," K+S spokesman Michael Wudonig said.

The European Commission must decide whether to accept the request and then has up to 15 months to make a decision on extending the duties, which would otherwise expire in July. The tariffs would remain in force while it considered the matter.

Though EU output is dwarfed by mines in Canada, Russia, Brazil and Australia, producers have raised concerns that closing European mines could make the continent dependent on foreign supplies of an essential farm input.

A five-year extension would keep in place the duty-free ceiling and tariffs of up to 27.5 percent until at least 2016. EU producers say an extension is crucial to prevent a flood of the fertilizer drowning their own production.

EU importers campaigning for an end to the duties say there is no prospect of expanding domestic potash production to meet rising demand, and that maintaining the tariffs would increase input costs for farmers.

"The availability of imports at a fair price is a big, big concern for the farming industry," said John Scollay, managing director of Fintec, which distributes potash from Belarus.

"I doubt lifting the measures would immediately result in lower prices, but it may mitigate price increases, because this potash market is going to stay very tight," Scollay said.

Tariffs have been in place on potash imports from Belarus and Russia since 1992, countering what the EU says are illegal price discounts that threaten EU production.

The measures were softened in 2006 with the introduction of a duty-free allowance of about 1.5 million tons.

Prices of potash soared over the last decade to more than $1,000 per ton from less than $150, but eased last year to about $500 as the credit crisis and falling grain prices cut farmers' spending.

Defying European industry's anti-trust concerns, Russia's anti-monopoly watchdog last week approved the merger of producers Uralkali and Silvinit.

European producers are likely to argue that the fusing of Russia's largest producers — and the fact that Silvinit already owns Belarus' main producer — creates a powerful exporter whose market share ambitions in Europe should be checked.





This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment


Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook



Also in Business

Shipping Threatens to Trouble Baltic Waters

More than three centuries after Peter the Great gave Russia access to the world by founding St. Petersburg as a "window onto Europe" at the head of the Gulf of Finland, area ports handle more than one-third of all oil exports and more than half of the country's container cargo turnover.

Gazprom May Increase Investment Spending

Gazprom could again increase its investment program for this year, after recently announcing plans to raise investment spending by 8.5 percent to $27 billion.

Companies in Airline Sector Report Growth

Transaero may double dividends paid to shareholders for 2011 when the company's board of directors votes on increasing the payments to 44 kopecks per share at their June 23 meeting.

Bosch Plans to Expand Auto Plant in Saratov

Bosch is planning to localize more auto parts assembly lines in Russia following a profitable year during which the technology supplier saw its sales in the country jump 50 percent to almost 1 billion euros ($1.2 billion).

Source: Dergunova Tapped to Lead Property Agency

VTB board member Olga Dergunova will be appointed to head the Federal Property Management Agency, Vedomosti reported Wednesday, citing unnamed government sources.

Medicine Ads May Disappear, Defense Ministry May Pick Up Slack

Russians are no strangers to military rigor and physical pain — a cultural trait that the government seems keen to incorporate into its advertising strategy.



print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read
MarketGid