- Bearish: Ukrainian agricultural road exports fell 27% in early March versus the same February period, pointing to weaker overland trade flows.
- Neutral: Daily shipment volumes remained stable within a narrow range, indicating operational consistency rather than acute logistical disruption.
- Structural: Poland remains the key export corridor, reinforcing its strategic role in channeling Ukrainian agricultural products to EU markets.
Ukrainian Agricultural Road Exports Decline 27% in Early March
Ukrainian agricultural product exports via road transport totaled 204,000 tons during March 1–19, down 27% from 281,000 tons over the same period in February, according to Spike Brokers. The 77,000-ton decline reflects lower average daily shipment rates rather than any sharp logistical disruptions.
Daily shipments in March moved within a narrow band of 9,500–12,800 tons, indicating steady but slower flows compared with February. The absence of volume spikes suggests balanced operations, with neither major surges in demand nor acute bottlenecks along the key corridors.
Corridor Performance and Volumes
| Metric / Corridor | Period / Range | Volume / Daily Rate | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total road exports | Mar 1–19 | 204,000 tons | Down 27% from comparable period in Feb |
| Total road exports | Feb 1–19 (comparable) | 281,000 tons | Reference for month-on-month comparison |
| Daily shipment range | Mar 1–19 | 9,500–12,800 tons/day | Stable flows without pronounced peaks |
| Poland corridor | Mar 1–19 | 4,000–6,000 tons/day | Primary export route |
| Romania corridor | Mar 1–19 | 2,500–3,300 tons/day | Second-largest export route |
| Moldova corridors | Mar 1–19 | 1,000–2,300 tons/day | Supplementary but active flows |
| Hungary & Slovakia | Mar 1–19 | Moderate, stable throughput | Secondary supporting corridors |
Market Implications
The 27% volume reduction may indicate tightening in Ukrainian overland export capacity or softer demand in nearby European markets. With daily flows steady but slower, the data point to either supply constraints at origin or cautious buying behavior rather than acute border disruption.
Poland’s continued dominance underscores its strategic importance for Ukrainian exports, while Romania, Moldova, Hungary, and Slovakia provide essential diversification. For now, the impact on freight rates appears neutral, but if reduced volumes persist and trucking capacity remains ample, downward pressure on road freight rates is possible.
Source: Market Data


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