Occupied Crimea. Exports and Imports in 2014-2020
The Monitoring Group of BlackSeaNews
and the Black Sea Institute of Strategic Studies
presents an updated series of articles
«The Socio-Economic Situation in Occupied Crimea in 2014 – 2020»:
Back in the USSR. The Reverse Restructuring of the Crimean Economy
The "Trophy Economy". Militarization as a Factor of Industrial Growth
The "Trophy Economy". The Development of the Stolen Ukrainian Black Sea Shelf
The Commercial Exploitation of Marine Biological Resources
The Crimean "Trophy Economy". The Sale of Ukrainian Property
Occupied Crimea. Exports and Imports in 2014-2020
The Banking System and Investment in Crimea: What is Really Happening on the Occupied Peninsula
Water in Occupied Crimea: No Catastrophe. Just a 50-Year Step Backwards
The Crimean Budget. Small Business. Salaries and Pensions
* * *
In 2013, foreign exports from the Crimean Peninsula amounted to 904.9 million dollars, and foreign imports totalled 1.044 billion dollars; Sevastopol’s exports and imports were valued at 99.8 million dollars and 106.9 million dollars, respectively.
The Crimean occupation government’s statistics have never been a reliable source of information. But even these data reveal some telling results of "international economic activity " (See Figure 1 and Figure 2).
Thus, in 2019, exports from Crimea decreased by 26.9 times in dollar terms compared to 2013, the last pre-war year, and exports from Sevastopol dropped by 15.6 times. The decline in imports over the same period was by 17.3 times in Crimea and by 16.97 times in Sevastopol.
Let us illustrate some indicators of international economic activity with the authors' own investigations.
In 2014-2020, the exports from the ports of occupied Crimea have been as follows:
- grain to Syria, Northern Cyprus, Lebanon, Libya, Egypt, and Turkey (until 2018) from Sevastopol, Kerch, and Feodosiia;
- scrap metal to Turkey (until 2019), Romania (until 2017), and Albania from Sevastopol and Feodosiia;
- soda ash to Russia, Romania (until 2017), Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt from Sevastopol and Feodosiia;
- liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from the gas terminal at the Kerch Fishing Sea Port to Bulgaria (until 2017), Turkey (until 2019), Syria and Lebanon (until 2019);
- re-export of Russian fuel from the Feodosiia oil depot to Syria (2020).
Imports to Crimean ports have been as follows:
- building materials (cement, сlinker bricks, gypsum, construction mixtures, сrushed stone) from Turkey; сrushed stone from Abkhazia (until 2019);
- the chemical raw material ilmenite from Norway (2017) and Turkey (re-export).
The main export commodity of occupied Crimea is grain (See Figure 3).
A significant part of grain exports is carried out through transshipment in the Kerch Strait, at Port Kavkaz Anchorage No. 451 in Taman. This allows mixing Crimean grain with grain from the regions of the Russian Federation to disguise the fact that it originates from the occupied territory. This grain is then shipped to countries that adhere to international sanctions.
The maximum volume of grain exports was recorded in 2017 when it reached 588 thousand tonnes, it decreased to 422 thousand tonnes in 2018, and to 300 thousand tonnes in 2019 (See Table).
The main imports to Crimea are ilmenite (the chemical raw material for the production of titanium dioxide at the Crimean Titan plant in Armiansk, northern Crimea) and construction materials. Part of the ilmenite is also imported through transshipment in order to circumvent sanctions (See Table).
Exports from Crimea in 2018 - 2019, thousand tonnes |
||
|
2018 |
2019 |
Grain |
422 000 |
300 000 |
Scrap metal |
70 000 |
21 000 |
Soda ash
|
25 000 |
18 000 |
Imports to Crimea in 2018 - 2019, thousand tonnes |
||
|
2018 |
2019 |
Ilmenite |
200 000 |
162 900 |
Crushed stone |
33 300 |
29 900 |
Construction materials |
66 800 |
13 300 |
* * *
This article has been published with the support of ZMINA
Human Rights Centre.
The content of the article is the sole responsibility of the authors.
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- 23.11.2021 Occupied Crimea. Exports and Imports / 2014-2021
- 23.11.2021 Water in Occupied Crimea / 2014-2021
- 23.11.2021 The Crimean Budget. Small Business. Salaries and Pensions / 2014-2021
- 23.11.2021 The "Trophy Economy". The Commercial Exploitation of Marine Biological Resources in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov / 2014–2021
- 21.11.2021 The "Trophy Economy". Militarization as a Factor of Industrial Growth / 2014-2021
- 21.11.2021 Back in the USSR. The Reverse Restructuring of the Crimean Economy / 2014-2021
- 20.11.2021 The "Trophy Economy". The Development of the Stolen Ukrainian Black Sea Shelf / 2014-2021
- 20.11.2021 The Occupied Crimean Tourism / 2014-2021