Global grain markets are now a battleground where the world’s great powers and producers use food as a strategic asset. Two main arenas have emerged in these food wars: the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the U.S.-China economic rivalry. As nations prioritise food security over free trade, vulnerable countries risk shortages, and global instability grows.
Russia and Ukraine: Conflict-Induced Disruptions
Since the onset of the Ukraine conflict, Russia has leveraged its grain exports to enhance its geopolitical influence and economic resilience. In 2022-2023, Russia exported 47M tonnes of wheat, winning the Kremlin tremendous power in the grain market.
Western sanctions encouraged Russia to strengthen trade relations with China, which increased its imports of Russian wheat by 78%. Furthermore, Russia proposed establishing a BRICS grain trading platform to facilitate trade among member countries and reduce dependence on Western-dominated markets. Food is reserved for one’s friends. Lastly, there was Russia's 2023 withdrawal from the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which facilitated the safe export of Ukrainian grain via the Black Sea, further exacerbating global food insecurity.
US-China Trade Wars
China’s push for food security aims to reduce reliance on American imports while bolstering domestic production and stockpiling. China has announced a 2030 target of producing 50M tons more in grain to safeguard against geopolitical risks, including tensions over Taiwan, the Korean peninsula, and border disputes with India.
China already holds over 50% of global wheat, rice, and maize reserves, making it the largest grain stockpiler. As a result, China’s grain imports are projected to decline significantly, with Beijing increasingly sourcing grain from Russia and Australia instead of the U.S.
For the U.S., this shift presents a major challenge. Despite a 3% increase in U.S. wheat exports in 2023-2024, the loss of Chinese demand has contributed to an expected $1B annual drop in U.S. agricultural exports to China. Meanwhile, the U.S. faces growing competition from Russia, which exported more than triple of U.S. wheat levels and at lower prices, capturing key markets in Africa and the Middle East.
Winners and Losers
The divide between winners and losers in the global grain market comes down to brute economics. Net exporters—Russia and the U.S.—and stockpilers like China generally benefit from global instability as they can dictate prices, use trade as leverage, which garner them political influence. On the other hand, this leaves net importers—often developing nations—to accept the hands they are dealt.
This dichotomy has been particularly evident in recent years, as global wheat prices spiked by 28% following the Russia-Ukraine war, and continue to remain 2-3% higher than pre-war levels.
Russia, being both the aggressor and a net exporter of grain, benefited economically (at least in its agricultural sector) from their invasion while food insecurity worsened globally. Likewise, U.S. and EU farmers benefited from the disruption as they reaped record profits—their highest in more than two decades—in wake of the disruption.
Not all exporters benefit from instability, though, as Ukraine itself exemplifies the plight of producers in unstable regions. Before the war, Ukrainian farmers earned an average of $270 per ton of grain. However, disruptions in production, transportation, and storage slashed their earnings to $100 per ton—below production costs—for two consecutive harvest seasons, driving many to financial ruin. It’s evident from Ukraine’s situation that though exporters benefit from global instability, that instability must be curtailed.
Net grain importers, particularly in Africa and the Middle East, bear the brunt of global instability. Countries like Egypt, Indonesia, and Bangladesh, which relied on Ukraine for much of their wheat before the war, faced severe shortages when exports collapsed. When Russia pulled out of the 2023 grain Black Sea Grain Initiative, it jeopardised over 50% of Lebanon’s and Pakistan’s wheat imports.
For these developing nations, even a modest 2-3% price increase adds to the strain of global inflation, worsening hunger and economic hardship for their citizens. When grain from Ukraine stops, some of the poorest countries in Africa and Asia suffer. Tariffs and trade restrictions only deepen this vulnerability—factors that will soon come into play as the threat of a global tariff war, spearheaded by the U.S., looms.
In the global grain game, those who control their own resources have the upper hand, while importers and producers in conflict zones are at the whim of others, struggling to survive. Food security is not simply a matter of supply and demand—it is a strategic weapon that decides who wins and loses in the international order.
Statement
Food is not mere sustenance—it’s a weapon of economic warfare. As Russia, Ukraine, China, and the U.S. manipulate grain supplies for strategic gain, the global food market has become a battleground. Russia wields exports to strengthen alliances, China stockpiles to insulate itself, and the U.S. faces growing competition from new players. Meanwhile, import-dependent nations teeter on the edge of crisis, as prices fluctuate and shortages loom. Winners and losers in the global grain game are ultimately determined by who controls their own resources: exporters benefit from global instability while importers fight for survival.