European Union member countries' envoys in Brussels will discuss this week a move by Poland and Hungary to ban grain and other food imports from Ukraine, a senior EU official said on Monday.
The senior EU official, speaking under condition of anonymity, said low global prices and demand meant the grain was staying in the bloc rather than being sold on.
The oversupply became a political problem for Poland's ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party in an election year.
Romanian farmers protesting last week against the EU's elimination of customs duties on all goods from Ukraine. /Daniel Mihailescu/AFP
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"We expect Poland and Hungary to offer some explanation and there will also be reaction by the European Commision," said the official, adding that the matter was raised at the last summit of EU national leaders, including by Slovakia and Romania.
"There is an issue and we expect the Commission to come up with a proposal on that... We'll see what we can do in the coming weeks and months."
Hungary could extend its import ban on Ukrainian grains beyond the current June 30 deadline if the EU does not take sufficient action to protect Hungarian farmers, Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture state secretary Sandor Farkas said.
Poland and Hungary announced bans on grain and other food imports from Ukraine on Saturday to protect their local agricultural sectors, drawing a warning from the EU's executive.
Ukraine's agriculture minister said Kyiv wanted to re-open food and grain transit via Poland as a first step at talks in Warsaw on Monday.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin said that prospects for a renewal of the the Black Sea grain deal, in which Russia allows Ukraine to ship agricultural exports from its Black Sea ports via Türkiye, were "not so bright."
On Monday, Ukraine's Restoration Ministry reported that Russia had blocked inspections of ships in Turkish waters.
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