Russia Suffers Huge Slash In Commodity Exports In March
- By The Financial District

- May 4, 2022
- 1 min read
Russian exports of key commodities collapsed in March as economic sanctions tied to Moscow's war in Ukraine began to take hold, the independent Moscow Times reported.

Photo Insert: Port of Kaliningrad, Russia
Month-to-month fertilizer shipments saw the biggest decline with a drop of 35 percent, according to data from the Association of Russian Seaports. Fertilizer exports fell to 1.1 million tons in March, compared with 1.7 million tons in February 2022, Agence France-Presse (AFP) also reported.
Iron ore exports also plummeted by 30 percent to 700,000 tons, while shipments of ferrous products fell 27 percent to 1.9 million tons. Grain shipments tumbled to 2.4 million tons, a 14 percent decrease from February.
Analysts linked falling fertilizer and metals exports with EU sanctions imposed on Moscow following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24 but said that most long-term export contracts remained stable.
The European Union (EU) says it is now working to launch new embargoes on Russian oil and gas, although officials confirmed last week such measures would take "several months."
The bloc currently imports around 45 percent of its gas from Russia. For the moment, Russia's energy exports remain steady, with some areas even reporting increases last month.
Russia’s seaborne oil flows climbed 10 percent to 21.4 million tons in March, a 1.9-million-ton increase from February. Liquefied natural gas exports also saw a 10 percent increase to 3.4 million tons.
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