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Bread and Butter of Russian Food Embargo: What, When, Why and for How Long?

© Sputnik / Maxim Blinov / Go to the mediabankSputnik provides a detailed story on Russian food embargo. Find out history, details and consequences of Russia’s embargo on import of food from Western countries.
Sputnik provides a detailed story on Russian food embargo. Find out history, details and consequences of Russia’s embargo on import of food from Western countries. - Sputnik International
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Sputnik provides a detailed story on Russian food embargo. Find out history, details and consequences of Russia’s embargo on import of food from Western countries.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — On August 6, 2014, Russia imposed a year-long embargo on import of food from the European Union, the United States and some other Western countries, in response to sanctions imposed against it over the Ukraine crisis.

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At the time, Russia was the European Union's second-biggest market for food exports.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev immediately ordered the agriculture ministry to find ways to boost Russian agricultural output in order to avoid consumer price increases.

The following day, the Russian government approved and published a black list of agricultural products, raw materials and foodstuffs subject to the import ban, should they originate in the United States, EU member states, Canada, Australia or Norway.

The ban targeted chilled and frozen beef, pork and poultry; salted, dried and smoked meat, fish and crustaceans; mollusks and other invertebrates. It also included milk and dairy products, vegetables, edible roots and tubers, fruits and nuts, sausage and similar meat, meat byproducts and blood products. The list also contained finished products, such as cheese and cottage cheese based on vegetable fats.

On August 20, the Russian government removed the following items from the banned list: seed material (potatoes, peas, sweet hybrid corn, and pearl onion), biologically active supplements, vitamin and mineral complexes designed to address vitamin and mineral deficiencies in the human organism, flavors and food additives, protein concentrates and mixtures thereof, dietary fiber, dietary supplements and lactose-free dairy products, as well as salmon and trout fingerlings.

In response to the Russian countermeasures, the European Commission implemented an array of steps to support its agricultural producers.

Since August 17, the European Commission has provided 33 million euro ($35.8 million) to support the peach and nectarine market, 125 million euro for producers of perishable fruit and vegetables, with targeted support for the storage of butter, powdered milk and cheese, as well as 30 million euro for programs to promote European agricultural products.

On September 10, the payments were frozen.

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On September 29, the European Commission adopted a new 165-million-euro program to compensate agricultural producers affected by the Russian food embargo.

For the first time, the list of supported sectors included orange, tangerine, and clementine producers. The subsidy program was also extended to fruit and vegetable producers in the following categories: apples, pears, carrots, cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes, kiwi, plums and table grapes. The new program also established strict criteria for the selection of European agricultural producers who could qualify for compensation. The European Commission was to make decisions based on a analysis of the volumes and trends in their exports to Russia over the past three years.

In December 2014, the European Commission said it was ready to adopt additional emergency market measures for perishable fruit and vegetables in the wake of the Russian ban.

The additional measures were in force until June 2015. They were designed to remove certain categories of products from the market in certain EU countries so they would not influence EU prices.

On June 25, 2015, Russia extended its food embargo for a year, until August 5, 2016 in response to the extension of the EU sanctions until January 31, 2016.

The initial 2014 list of products banned for import into Russia underwent some changes and eased certain requirements.

Oysters and mussels were taken off the list, but certain provisions were added that completely excluded the import of any of cheeses or lactose-free products, except those vital for people suffering from lactose insufficiency and registered as medicinal and dietary products.

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The embargo did not affect alcohol or canned fish, flowers or sweets, as proposed by the heads of various Russian agencies.

On July 30, 2015, the European Commission extended its agricultural support measures, introduced in response to the Russian embargo.

According to the European Commission, as of 2013, Lithuania was the largest exporter of agricultural and food products to Russia in the European Union (927 million euro); Poland was second (841 million euro) and Germany third (595 million euro). Dairy products constituted the largest share of EU exports to Russia in 2013 (1.349 billion euro), followed by fruit (1.258 billion euro), meat and cooked sausages (1.233 billion euro), vegetables (769 million euro), prepackaged food products (489 million euro) and fish products (154 million euro).

According to the Economic Development Ministry, between August 2014 and April 2015, food imports to Russia from countries subject to the countersanctions dropped by $2.5 billion.

Copa-Cogeca, an association of European farmers and agri-cooperatives, has estimated that, as of late July 2015, agricultural producers in EU countries have lost 5.5 billion euro as a result of the Russian food embargo.

The Austrian Institute for Economic Research (Wifo) said that the economic crisis in Russia, partially caused by the EU sanctions, could cost Europe 100 billion euro and two million jobs in the next few years. The European Commission has an opposing opinion, assessing the consequences of the anti-Russian sanctions as "relatively insignificant" and manageable.

Earlier this year, Medvedev stated that during the first months of 2015, imports of sanctioned products dropped by at least a third, but "the market almost did not notice that."

Meanwhile, Russia has boosted its domestic food production, as well as increasing food imports from Latin American, Asian and CIS counties.

On Tuesday, the Russian Agricultural Ministry announced that it was drafting a bill that would ban certain food imports from seven more countries — Albania, Montenegro, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Ukraine and Georgia — as they supported the latest EU extension of the restrictive measures against Russia.

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