Brussels, Belgium
November 26, 2007
The European Commission today
proposed the suspension of import duties on all cereals except
oats for the current marketing year - which ends on June 30,
2008. This is a reaction to the exceptionally tight situation on
the world and EU cereals markets and the record price levels.
Although the current levels of border protection for cereals are
rather low, import duties are still applied for certain types of
grains that are relevant for the balance of the EU market. The
proposal will have to be approved by the Council of Ministers,
hopefully at its meeting starting on 18 December.
"I hope this proposal will help facilitate cereals imports from
outside the EU and reduce tensions on European grains markets,"
said Mariann Fischer Boel, Commissioner for Agriculture and
Rural Development. "We have seen a modest harvest in Europe and
high prices both at home and on world markets. Border protection
for cereals is relatively low, but import duties still apply to
certain cereals which are key to assuring EU market balance."
Cereals market situation
At the start of the 2007/08 marketing year in July, total stocks
(private + intervention) were 13.2 million tonnes below levels
at the same time the previous year. This is the result of the
modest harvest in 2006/07 and significant withdrawals from EU
intervention stocks. In 2007, unfavourable weather conditions
reduced the harvest and overall EU production is estimated at
256 million tonnes, a fall of10 million tonnes or 3.5 % on the
already modest 2006/07 harvest. Output is declining at a time
when EU stocks are already low. As a result, the EU will need
more imports in 2007/08 than in 2006/07. Traditionally a net
exporter, in 2007/08 the EU has become a net importer since 1st
July 2007 (5.2 million tonnes by 20th November)
European cereals markets have seen a spectacular upsurge in
prices since the start of 2007/08. There are tensions on the
small-grain cereals and maize markets, as a result of reduced
stocks of common wheat and maize, poorer than forecast quality,
and the exhaustion of intervention stocks (currently down to 0.5
million tonnes).
Since the start of the new marketing year, the price of milling
wheat in Rouen has risen from 179 per tonne to almost 300 per
tonne at the start of September 2007. In Germany bread-making
wheat was selling at 70% higher than the previous year by
mid-August. Market prices for feed barley have increased in the
wake of rising wheat prices. On the French market, feed barley
has more than doubled over the summer 2006 rate, listing at up
to 270 per tonne in Rouen at the end of September 2007. The
high price of barley has triggered a rise in demand for maize
for animal feed. French maize prices in Bayonne followed the
same trend, rising from 183 per tonne at the start of the new
marketing year on 2 July 2007 to a peak of 255 per tonne in
mid-September 2007.
Background on import duties
The EU has bound tariffs for all cereals set under the GATT
agreement. However, applied rates are different. The system
originates in the Blair House Agreement between the US and the
EU and involves setting tariffs on the basis of separate world
reference prices for clearly defined cereals types. The duty is
fixed on the basis of the difference between the effective EU
intervention price for cereals including monthly increments,
multiplied by 1.55 and a representative cif import price for
cereals at Rotterdam.
The resulting duty is currently set at 0 for durum wheat, high
quality soft wheat, rye and sorghum. The duty for maize has
fluctuated since the beginning of the current marketing year,
from a peak of 16.21 per tonne to 0 since 1 October 2007.
Outside these quotas, a maximum duty of 93 and 95 per tonne
respectively applies.
Tariff rate quotas were introduced in 2003 on barley and low and
medium quality wheat in response to large imports from Community
of Independent States countries.
For medium and low quality soft wheat, annual Tariff Rate Quota
of 2,989,240 tonnes is open, including a country-specific quota
of 572,000 tonnes earmarked for imports originating in the
United States and 38,853 tonnes for Canada. The remaining
2,378,387 million tonnes is split into four equal tranches of
594,597 tonnes, one of which is open each quarter to other third
countries. The duty payable on imports under the quota is set at
12/tonne.
For barley, annual Tariff Rate Quota of 306,215 tonnes is open
with 16/tonne duty payable. There is another quota of 50,000
tonnes of malting barley at a duty of 8/tonne.
A duty-free quota of 242,074 tonnes of maize was introduced in
2006 which is split into two equal tranches open to all third
countries. This quota has been entirely used for 2007.
For maize and sorghum imported into Spain and Portugal, there
are reduced tariff import quotas since Spain and Portugals
accession to the EU.
For oats, the import tariff is 89/tonne. |
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