Amid months of farmers' protests and some EU countries calling for tougher trade restrictions, the bloc's lawmakers on Wednesday reached a tentative deal to extend the continuation of tariff-free imports from Ukraine into the EU for another year.
However, in a bid to satisfy European farmers, the provisional deal agrees to reduce imports on many Ukrainian foodstuffs, as well as to introduce a levy that kicks in if the quantities imported of poultry, eggs, sugar, oats, maize, and honey exceeds the average from 2022 and 2023.
EU officials are closely monitoring Ukrainian imports. While the deal does not impose a blanket ban, there are mechanisms in place to prevent European markets from being flooded with cheap produce. The new agreement toughens these restrictions — a sign from EU officials to farmers that they're listening to their concerns.
Rather than alleviating concerns, the farmers' protests are only spreading. They are neither confined to a few Eastern countries nor to the issue of Ukrainian imports — protests are now taking place across the continent and farmers are angry at a variety of different issues.