KIEV (Reuters) — Ukraine’s Agriculture Ministry asked traders to cap milling wheat exports at 200,000 tonnes per month in January and February despite a large volume of wheat in stocks, traders said on Tuesday.
The suggested limits are not obligatory, traders said. The ministry could not be reached for comment.
February exports of wheat from Ukraine ranged from 188,000 tonnes to 446,000 tonnes in the previous three years, with milling wheat comprising about half the total.
“They (the ministry) asked us to export 200,000 tonnes of milling wheat in January and in February and then to meet again to consider a future strategy,” a foreign trader said after a meeting of top grain exporters and the ministry’s officials.
Read Also

B.C. ostrich owner condemns violence near embattled farm
One of the owners of Universal Ostrich near Edgewood, B.C. condemned the alleged assault and arson against one of the farm’s neighbours said to have been committed by a protestor. The farm is in a legal battle with federal authorities over a cull order of the farm’s ostriches, which contracted avian influenza.
Traders said the ministry wanted to keep as much wheat in stock as possible because it was uncertain how much the next harvest, in July, would yield.
Agriculture Minister Oleksiy Pavlenko said on Saturday Ukraine had no plan to restrict grain exports and would instead meet with traders to plan the year ahead as normal, after Russia introduced curbs to stabilize surging prices.
He said his ministry and traders would prepare a memorandum for the season, which runs from July 2014 to June 2015, allowing the government to impose restrictions if exports exceeded specified volumes.
Traders said this memorandum, which is produced every year, was likely to be signed in the near future.
Ukraine has exported around 8.5 million tonnes of all types of wheat so far this season, out of a total export surplus that traders estimate at 10 million tonnes.