Russia agrees to 60-day Ukraine grain deal extension
- Russia suggests renewing Black Sea grain deal for only half the term of the previous renewal
- Original 120-day deal was negotiated last year to facilitate Ukrainian exports via three Black Sea ports

Russia agreed to extend the Ukraine grain export deal, but only for a further 60 days, in a proposal criticised by Kyiv.
Following talks with the United Nations in Geneva, Moscow said it would not oppose prolonging the so-called Black Sea Grain Initiative aimed at easing the global food crisis, as had been feared.
But it only agreed to extending the deal for half of the 120-day period of the original accord.
Ukraine said the agreement required any extension to last 120 days but did not reject the proposal. Turkey said talks were still ongoing.
“We will follow the agreement strictly,” a senior Ukrainian government official said. The official declined to be identified.
Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 saw Ukraine’s Black Sea ports blocked by warships until the deal, signed in July, allowed for the safe passage of exports of critical grain supplies.