The UK has "very little stocks" of sunflower oil (SFO) left and will see "supply dwindling" in the coming weeks as a result of a severe supply shortage caused by the conflict in Ukraine, the President of the National Edible Oil Distributors' Association (NEODA) said.
"There is very little [sunflower] oil left in the UK," Gary Lewis, the president of NEODA, told Argus. "We are reliant on constant supplies, but they have been sharply reduced since the attacks on Ukraine… supplies are dwindling."
When asked about supply issues going forward, Lewis said that the UK is seeing "no further supplies coming in at this time" but added that NEODA was monitoring the situation "on a monthly basis".
According to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the UK is expected to consume 340,000t of SFO domestically in the 2021-22 marketing year, with the product a vital ingredient in foods such as crisps and chips. But the nation has a very limited production capacity of just 11,000 t/yr.
As a result, the UK relies heavily on imports, with the USDA projecting 340,000t to be purchased in 2021-22, the majority of which would normally come from Ukraine and Russia.
Ukraine is the world's largest producer of SFO, followed by Russia, with the two nations exporting 77pc of the world's SFO between them.
But the USDA estimates that just 2.94mn t of SFO was exported by Ukraine between September 2021-February 2022, out of the 5.75mn t projected for exports in the whole marketing year. And with exports from Ukraine's Black and Azov Seas blocked since the beginning of the conflict on 24 February, the world may be unable to replace the 2.81mn t drop in supply.
"The EU and Argentina are also producers, but they cannot offset the losses from Ukraine," Lewis said.
With the UK's stocks of SFO plummeting and the conflict in Ukraine looking set to continue, importers and consumers will need to turn their attention to alternative products. "Customers will have to be more open minded in terms of oil supply and need to explore other oils, including soybean oil," Lewis said.
Rapeseed oil is another substitute that has been touted as a potential alternative to SFO. But while Lewis said that the NEODA has "seen a number of customers move to rapeseed oil", he also indicated that supplies of this product were now also running low because of the increased demand. "We are now in a situation where we can't offer any additional rapeseed until August," he said.
And the longer the conflict in Ukraine continues, the worse the edible oil supply crunch will get. Despite efforts to export grains and oils by rail, Ukraine was only able to deliver 9,000t of the product to the EU 27 in the week to 27 March. Prior to the conflict, the nation averaged exports of 122,500 t/week to the bloc.