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The United States Agency for International Development
(USAID) has warned Nigeria and other African countries to prepare for higher
food prices.

 

Speaking at a media briefing on Thursday, Isobel Coleman,
USAID’s deputy administrator for policy and programming, attributed the
development to Russia’s recent decision to abandon the Black Sea Grain
Initiative.

 

Established in July 2022, the Black Sea Grain Initiative is
aimed at abating a global food crisis after Russia invaded Ukraine — a
neighbouring country and fellow key grain exporter.

 

The deal allowed for commercial food and fertilizer
(including ammonia) exports from three key Ukrainian ports in the Black Sea —
Odesa, Chornomorsk, and Yuzhny/Pivdennyi.

 

Coleman said the impact of the hike in food prices would be
more felt in developing countries that were import-dependent, and had
conventionally relied on grain imports from Ukraine.

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She said just in the last few weeks since pulling out of the
initiative, the government of Ukraine estimated that Putin’s missiles and drone
attacks have destroyed 180,000 metric tons of Ukrainian grains sitting in storage.

 

According to her, the grain is sufficient to feed almost 12
million people for a month.

 

 “It is very, very
important to keep in mind is that countries that import grains, those grains
are global commodities and they are priced globally. And taking off from the
market one of the world’s largest breadbaskets – Ukraine – by doing that,
Russia is increasing global food prices,” Coleman said.

 

“We’ve seen already how when the Black Sea Grain Initiative
deal came into place, global food prices came down over time, and since Russia
has pulled out of the agreement, food prices have again been on the rise.

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“And this affects every country around the world, but it
affects most acutely large importing developing countries that have to spend
much more of their precious foreign exchange resources to purchase food to feed
their populations.”

 

Coleman said Russia’s withdrawal from the initiative, which
in principle, prevented Ukraine from exporting grain to Nigeria and other
developing countries, would have dire consequences for food security.

 

She said 65 percent of the grains from the Black Sea Grain
Initiative have gone to developing countries and 20 percent have gone directly
to the least developed countries.

 

Coleman recalled that in the wake of the last food crisis
that rocked global food security in 2008, the US government launched “Feed The
Future” – an approach to invest in food security and making countries more
resilient to food crises.

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“And today we invest in more than 40 countries across
Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, really around the world, and we
have 20 – sorry, 20 target countries that have very high levels of poverty and
hunger, and also a strong potential for agriculture to drive economic growth
and to transform food systems,” she said.

 

Coleman said USAID was currently exploring alternate routes
— via the Danube, via road, via rail –for exporting Ukraine’s grains.