For Ukraine, the EU is the destination for about half of all agricultural exports. For the EU, Ukrainian goods account for less than 7 percent of food imports.
The same trade flows have produced three years of farmer-protest politics in Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary, and the renegotiated trade deal Brussels struck with Kyiv in response. The deal did not address the larger fight—over what would happen to EU farm subsidies if Ukraine joins the bloc.
The political weight given to Ukrainian agricultural imports has always been larger than the actual trade volumes would suggest.
Ukraine’s deputy minister of economy, environment and agriculture, Taras Vysotskyi, told Euromaidan Press in an interview published on 22 May that the political weight given to Ukrainian agricultural imports has always been larger than the actual trade volumes would suggest.
The data confirms an asymmetry: what is central to Ukraine’s economy is marginal for the EU as a whole. The Common Agricultural Policy remains an open question.

Trade, in context
Agricultural exports account for more than 50 percent of total Ukrainian exports, Vysotskyi said—reaching 62 percent in some quarters. The EU buys about half of those exports, making Brussels the most important trade partner for the most important sector.
Total Ukrainian agricultural exports fell 9 percent in 2025 to $22.7 billion, according to the Institute of Agrarian Economics, with the drop in EU supplies driving most of the decline after the new quota regime took effect.
Ukrainian goods accounted for close to 7 percent of EU agricultural imports in 2024.
For the EU, the same flows are a small share of a much larger food market. Ukrainian goods accounted for close to 7 percent of EU agricultural imports of €171.8 billion ($199 billion) in 2024, per European Commission data. By share of total EU consumption, Ukraine is below 5 percent.
The Commission’s March 2026 figures confirmed Ukrainian flows declined further in 2025, while imports from Sub-Saharan Africa, Canada, Vietnam, and the United States grew.

How the deal came about
Brussels suspended tariffs and quotas on Ukrainian agricultural produce in 2022, under the Autonomous Trade Measures scheme, after Russia’s invasion blockaded the Black Sea. Grain that was meant to transit to global markets instead disrupted local prices in Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Bulgaria—triggering waves of farmer protests across 2023, 2024, and 2025.
EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen said the autonomous trade measures had been prolonged twice and now needed to give way to long-term predictability.
The tariff suspension ended on 5 June 2025. EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen said the autonomous trade measures had been prolonged twice and now needed to give way to long-term predictability and reciprocity.
The replacement deal, agreed in principle on 30 June, brought Ukrainian access back inside quotas, with safeguards triggered by serious difficulties at the EU or Member State level—concessions that mostly tracked the protesters’ demands.

Vysotskyi’s framing
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“This is more a political topic than a question of real numbers,” Vysotskyi told Euromaidan Press. “We try to explain it as a matter of cooperation, not competition.”
The political weight given to Ukrainian agricultural flows reflects geographic proximity and the organization of farmers in transit states.
His argument: the political weight given to Ukrainian agricultural flows reflects geographic proximity and the organization of farmers in transit states, not Ukraine’s actual share of the European market.
The 2025 decline supports his case on the trade side.
What he doesn’t address: CAP
The trade fight was always a proxy for a larger one. Per a Euronews analysis published in October 2025, EU member states worry that Ukraine’s farmland—the largest in Europe—would reshape the Common Agricultural Policy if Kyiv joins.
Russian occupation has shrunk the usable area to about 24.5 million hectares.
The CAP distributes payments by farm size, and Ukraine’s 41.3 million hectares of pre-war agricultural land is larger than any single EU member state’s—France has 27.4 million, Spain 23.9 million. Russian occupation has shrunk the usable area to about 24.5 million hectares by Vysotskyi’s count, and he argues much of the data driving the EU debate still uses the pre-war figures, inflating the scale of Ukraine’s current footprint.
The structural concern stands either way. About 110 large agroholdings dominate Ukrainian export agriculture, per industry platform FarmEurope. That concentration is what EU farmer associations point to when they raise subsidy concerns.
The next negotiation round will be shaped less by EU-wide market data than by the politics in Warsaw, Bratislava, and Budapest.
Polish, Slovak, and Hungarian governments have read that math. The 2025 trade deal addressed the imports that their farmer associations could point to on a customs receipt. It did not address what their farmers might lose in subsidy payments after a future Ukrainian accession. That is why the political fight has not ended.
Trade Commissioner Maroš Šefčovič said when the deal landed that Ukraine had committed to gradually align its agricultural production standards with the EU’s by 2028, in line with its accession goals. Vysotskyi’s read is that the next round will be shaped less by EU-wide market data than by the politics in Warsaw, Bratislava, and Budapest.


