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Ukraine's grain exports by means of Romania's Constanta down by half in Jan-Sept

Ukraine's grain exports through the Romanian Black Sea port of Constanta fell by half on the year in the first 9 months to 5.17 million metric lots, the port authority stated, as Kyiv has progressively counted on its own ports this year despite Russian attacks on ships and port infrastructure.

Constanta remains Ukraine's main alternative route for grain since Russia's full-blown invasion and the port has actually seen an influx of European Union investment funds to improve its capability.

However Ukraine has actually managed to improve grain exports through its own ports by developing a shipping passage that hugs the western Black Sea coast near Romania and Bulgaria after Russia withdrew from a U.N.-backed export initiative last year.

Earlier this month, Ukrainian officials said a Russian rocket hit 2 vessels in as many days in the southern port of Odesa, following two comparable attacks in September. Russia has repeatedly struck Ukraine's Black Sea and Danube river port infrastructure.

Constanta Port information, which does not include volumes managed through smaller sized Romanian ports and exports by rail and roadway, showed that 430,000 lots of Ukrainian grain left port in September.

Monthly volumes increased compared with summer months, when low Danube levels due to drought complex transportation to Constanta.

Total grain exports through Constanta totalled 21.86 million heaps in the very first 9 months, down 12.9% on the year.

Romania is among the EU's most significant grain exporters and its Constanta port likewise manages grain circulations from landlocked neighbours including Serbia, Hungary and Moldova.

(source: Reuters)