🇺🇦Уряд Ukraine has introduced a mechanism that - in line with the logic of maintaining control over export flows - imposes new requirements for confirming "home-grown" crops such as soybeans and rapeseed. The new procedure combines administrative control and the role of trade and industrial infrastructure (issuing conclusions on the origin of goods), which is intended to protect national interests and at the same time has raised a wave of questions from exporters and agricultural producers.
📍 WHAT EXACTLY HAS CHANGED
The new document establishes a mandatory procedure for confirming the "own cultivation" of certain crops in order to obtain preferential (or zero) export treatment. In fact, before shipment abroad, the exporter must have an official conclusion/certificate of origin and own cultivation of the consignment issued by an authorised body (in particular, the system of Chambers of Commerce and Industry or the relevant authorised structure).
This solution has a purpose:
- to make it impossible to operate "re-export" schemes and abuses;
- ensure that the benefits go to domestic producers;
- increase control over agricultural resources, especially in the face of increased market volatility.
At the same time, the changes create additional logistical and administrative barriers for businesses - especially in the context of tight shipping deadlines and a significant seasonal concentration of supplies.
LEGAL CONTEXT AND ROLE OF CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY
Legally, the mechanism is based on the established practice of issuing conclusions on the origin of goods: chambers of commerce and other authorised bodies have traditionally issued certificates of origin confirming where the goods came from and by whom. The new initiative formalises and specifies these procedures for certain crops, requiring a clear set of documents and sometimes field inspections.
The key question is whether regional institutions (CCI and local branches) are ready to issue such conclusions on a massive scale in a prompt, transparent manner and at no additional cost to farmers. If the answer is no, then there is a risk of slowing down exports and increasing transaction costs.
But the answer is "yes, we are ready". We started testing the registration procedure.
📄 OPERATIONAL IMPLICATIONS FOR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCERS AND EXPORTERS
1. Documentation and accounting. From now on, agricultural producers must have a "clean" chain of documents: a supply agreement, sowing documents (sowing lists), acts of completion, commodity certificates from elevators, and accompanying invoices. Without this, it is impossible to obtain a conclusion in a timely manner.
2. Inspections and unscheduled audits. In some cases, regional authorities may require on-site inspections of warehouses and fields, which is time-consuming and costly.
3. Risk of delays. When large shipments are pending, export contracts are at risk of penalties for late delivery, or buyers may use force majeure declarations.
4. Heterogeneity of practices. The procedure can be interpreted differently from region to region, which creates uncertainty and corruption risks.
💵ECONOMIC RISKS AND IMPACT SCENARIOS
- Short-term: possible export delays, a drop in shipments during peak months, and a temporary decline in foreign exchange earnings.
- Medium-term: If the procedure remains cumbersome, some operators will switch to domestic processing or other crops; this may boost the development of the local processing industry, but at the same time reduce foreign exchange earnings from export grain.
- Long-term: If the mechanism works transparently and quickly, Ukraine will get better monitoring of resources and control over duties; if not, we risk losing competitiveness in key markets.
💡PRACTICAL RECOMMENDATIONS: WHAT TO DO TODAY
FOR THE STATE:
- Unify and simplify the procedure: a single electronic platform for submitting documents and receiving conclusions remotely minimises corruption and delays.
- Establish clear SLAs (processing times) - for example, 48-72 hours for a standard package of documents.
- Support for small and medium-sized businesses: information hubs and mobile inspection teams for remote areas.
- Transparent inspection criteria and published checklists so that farmers can prepare documents accurately and immediately.
FOR CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY:
1. Digitalisation of the process: guarantee of electronic signatures, uploading photos and acts. 2. Training and standardisation: the same methodology for all regional offices.
FOR FARMERS AND EXPORTERS:
1. Keep clean records: crop rotations, seed certificates, inventory books, contracts with elevators. 2. Create packages of "export-ready" documents in advance. 3. Form pools (co-operatives) for centralised certification and logistics - this reduces the cost of obtaining conclusions for each participant.
📱WHY THIS CAN BE AN OPPORTUNITY
If the mechanism is implemented wisely, it:
- will force the market to move towards better accounting discipline;
- will provide the state and business with more accurate data on actual production volumes;
- create conditions to stimulate processing in Ukraine (i.e., added value);
- will allow targeted support to be applied to those producers who actually grow crops on their land.
🌾The reform of soybean and rapeseed export control through the requirement of "home-grown" conclusions is both a useful tool and a source of trauma for businesses if implemented hastily and without unified rules. Success will depend on three things: transparency of the process, speed of electronic administration, and the government's willingness to invest in supporting small and medium-sized farms.
The task is not just to control it - it also needs to be turned into a development driver: high-quality documentation, centralised processing, investments in processing and logistics - and Ukraine will have a powerful tool to protect its resources and increase the value of exports.


