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Egypt’s rejection of Russian wheat over ergot creates latest supply snag

Egypt, the world’s biggest wheat importer, has rejected a Russian wheat cargo for excessive levels of the common grain fungus ergot, an agriculture ministry spokesman said on Thursday, the latest of several cargoes recently held back.

The 63,000-tonne cargo, sold to state grain buyer GASC, contained 0.06 percent ergot, just above the 0.05 percent limit permitted according to Egypt’s state tender rules, spokesman Hamid Abdel Dayim said.

A source at the company responsible for the cargo said the wheat was in line with tender specifications.

For Russia, Egypt is the largest and the most important wheat market. Russia’s agriculture safety watchdog will send a team of specialists to Egypt to examine the situation on June 2, Interfax news agency reported, citing its spokeswoman Yulia Melano.

Russia has samples of wheat sent to Egypt, she said, adding that “we are sure that the product, which was sent, meets Egypt’s requirements.”

Egypt has in recent years baffled traders by applying tough import standards, most notably a zero tolerance level for ergot, which it later scrapped for the more internationally accepted 0.05 percent content level after major suppliers shunned state tenders.

Egypt’s top administrative court this week backed the international standard favoured by suppliers, freezing a lower court order that would have re-instated the total ergot ban.

Difficulties in doing business including tough inspections have prompted traders to add hefty premiums that total hundreds of thousands of dollars to offer prices in state tenders, premiums they say are necessary to hedge against the risk of doing business.

The rejected cargo is the fourth shipment halted in recent weeks, though the first to be rejected for ergot. The cargoes amount to about 250,000 tonnes of grains that GASC may now have to tap world markets for.

Supply Minister Ali Moselhy told Reuters last week that two cargoes contracted with Dubai-based trader AOS had never arrived.

Moselhy said a third AOS shipment was seized at an Egyptian port, and a port official said the wheat was now being held amid a payment dispute, though the company declined to comment.

Egypt is unlikely to face any immediate shortages, as the hold-ups come amid a local harvest in which the government has already bought 3 million tonnes of its 3.5 million target, and strategic reserves are sufficient to cover the country’s need for five months, according to Moselhy.

Dayim said the agriculture quarantine service, a body that has strictly enforced ergot rules in recent years, had rejected the trade company’s request to re-test the contaminated shipment.

The quarantine refusal suggests the cargo will likely have to be re-exported, but grain traders said that could prove costly and difficult as silos in the Red Sea port of Safaga where it is being held are not equipped with loading gear to re-load grains aboard the vessel.

The trade company source, who did not wish to be named, said it was still pushing the quarantine service to re-test the cargo.

“Our wheat is clean and fully corresponds to tender specifications. It was confirmed by all official entities and the inspection company at loading,” the source said. (Reporting by Maha El Dahan, Polina Devitt, Momen Saeed Atallah, Eric Knecht; Editing by Mark Potter, Susan Fenton and Alexandra Hudson)

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