As I said earlier, markets for Ukrainian food production are critical. It's critical that we find ways to get food from Ukraine, which is produced by incredibly resilient farmers for the developing world and countries that depend upon it and need it.
The bans put in place to protect farmers in five countries next door to Ukraine are to protect against cheap produce from a war-torn nation. Those countries have taken those decisions. However, our focus is getting Ukrainian food not to those countries but to the countries in the Global South that need it the most. When the Black Sea initiative was still functioning, and through a period of not quite a year, we managed to push 725,000 tonnes of Ukrainian food to countries in the Global South that desperately needed it. Very importantly, food got to the global marketplace. It got to countries well beyond those in the neighbourhood.
Solidarity Lanes have continued to allow grain and other non-cereals, including oilseed, to be exported from this country, to the tune of almost 60 million tonnes. It is still possible to get food from this country to the rest of the world. It is still possible to use Black Sea ports through neighbouring countries like Romania. Even though we've seen a stop on domestic purchases by the neighbours, there are still other opportunities available.