A high-resolution, cinematic wide shot of a convoy of heavy agricultural freight trucks lined up at a busy European border crossing checkpoint between Ukraine and Poland at dusk

Ukrainian Agricultural Truck Exports Fall 14% in April

  • Bearish: Ukrainian agricultural truck exports fell 14.4% in April to 285,300 tonnes, signaling softer land-based export activity versus March.
  • Structural: Flows remain heavily concentrated on Polish and Romanian corridors, underlining their role as the main westward export channels.
  • Value-added focus: Processed products such as sunflower oil, poultry, and ethyl alcohol continue to dominate truck freight, reflecting road transport economics.

Market Update

Ukrainian agricultural automotive exports reached 285,300 tonnes in April, down 14.4% from March’s peak of 333,200 tonnes, based on Spike Brokers data. The decline points to a moderation in truck-based flows after a strong March, with volumes still channeled predominantly through western border crossings.

Six key checkpoints handled the bulk of April’s freight, led by Krakovets-Korcheva on the Polish border and Porubne-Siret on the Romanian corridor. These routes, together with other Polish, Romanian, and Hungarian crossings, continue to anchor Ukraine’s overland export logistics for agricultural products.

Border Checkpoint Volumes

Border Checkpoint Volume (tonnes) Corridor
Krakovets-Korcheva 52,100 Poland
Porubne-Siret 48,800 Romania
Rava-Ruska-Khrebennoe 33,800 Poland
Yagodin-Dorohusk 30,100 Poland
Chop-Zahony 26,300 Hungary
Dyakovo-Halmeu 24,900 Romania

Commodity Structure of Truck Exports

Processed agricultural products dominated the April truck export mix, underscoring the preference to use road freight for higher-value, value-added goods rather than bulk commodities that are more competitive via rail or maritime routes.

Commodity Volume (tonnes)
Sunflower oil 26,500
Poultry 23,300
Ethyl alcohol 21,800
Sugar 21,600
Soybean cake 18,100
Soybean oil 14,800

Logistics and Market Implications

The month-over-month decline in trucked volumes may reflect capacity constraints, seasonal adjustments, or shifts to alternative modes, but current data still highlight the resilience of western land corridors. Polish and Romanian crossings remain the primary export gateways, with Hungarian routes providing supplementary capacity.

For logistics coordinators and traders, the continued dominance of processed products in truck freight confirms that higher-margin goods retain priority access to road transport. Stable throughput across the main border points suggests that, despite regional risks, cross-border operations are holding steady for now.

Source: Market Data


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