The Cabinet of Ministers has cancelled export licensing for certain agricultural products

This particularly applies to certain types of meat, eggs, and grain

The Cabinet of Ministers has amended the list of goods requiring licensing and quotas for the year 2023, according to Resolution No. 1466 of 27 December.

This was reported on the Cabinet of Ministers' website.

It is noted that from now on, the export of live cattle (LC), LC meat and chickens, chicken eggs, rye, oats, and millet will no longer require licensing. In addition, licensing will no longer be required for the export of meat and edible meat by-products, salted or in brine, dried or smoked; edible flour from meat or meat by-products.

Recall that previously, according to the resolution, the export of goods requiring licensing included live cattle, frozen meat of cattle, meat of domestic chickens, salted/smoked meat by-products of cattle, eggs of domestic chickens, rye, oats, buckwheat, millet, sugar, nitrogen fertilisers, phosphorus fertilisers, potassium fertilisers, and fertilisers with nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium up to 10 kg per package.

Background. It was previously reported that due to the confusing formation of export quotas for agricultural goods, Ukraine is losing its position in India.

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