U.S. to Push Russia to Fulfil Ukraine Grain Deal

Calling out China for stockpiling grain that could be used for global humanitarian needs, the United States has said it will hold Russia accountable for implementing a U.N.-brokered deal to resume Ukraine's Black Sea grain exports.

Russia and Ukraine are major global wheat suppliers, and Moscow's Feb. 24 invasion of its neighbour sent food prices soaring, stoking a global food crisis the World Food Programme says has pushed some 47 million people into "acute hunger."

Russia and Ukraine signed a landmark deal on 22 July to reopen Ukrainian Black Sea ports for grain exports. The war has stalled Kyiv's exports, leaving dozens of ships stranded and some 20 million tonnes of grain stuck in silos.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Washington hopes the deal "will help mitigate the crisis Russia has caused," adding that "we will be watching closely to ensure that Russia actually follows through."

The United States also wants to see China help combat the global food crisis, James O'Brien, head of the U.S. State Department's Office of Sanctions Coordination, told reporters.

"We would like to see it act like the great power that it is and provide more grain to the poor people around the world," he said. "China has been a very active buyer of grain and it is stockpiling grain... at a time when hundreds of millions of people are entering the catastrophic phase of food insecurity."

China's grain stocks at the end of the 2021/22 season were estimated by the International Grains Council to be 323.4 million tonnes, more than half the global total of 607.4 million. They dwarf those of the United States, the world's top grain exporter, which were estimated at 57.8 million tonnes.

"We would like to see them play more of a role of making the grain available from their own stockpiles and by allowing WFP (World Food Programme) and others to obtain grain," said O'Brien.

He said some 40 percent of the first grain shipments out of Ukraine in April went to China "which was awkward."

"It would have been much better to see that grain going to Egypt, in the Horn of Africa and other places."

The Chinese Embassy in Washington said that China needs to maintain a certain amount of grain reserves because it has less than 9 percent of the world's farmland, but it accounts for one fifth of the world's population.