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A view of the village of Mokhovoye destroyed by a forest fire two week ago near the town of Lukhovitsy some 135 km (84 miles) southeast of Moscow. AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin
Widlfires

Russian wheat ban takes effect

And Moscow’s smog returns.

RUSSIA’S TEMPORARY BAN on grain exports took effect yesterday, angering grain traders and ports in Russia which had been enjoying bumper harvests over the last two years.

The country is the world’s third-largest exporter of wheat, and wheat prices soared after the ban was announced earlier this month. It will remain in place until the end of the year.

Crops destroyed

One quarter of Russia’s grain crops have been destroyed by the drought and ensuing wildfires, and the government is spending over $1 billion to help producers.

The ban aimed to prevent domestic prices surging, but sparked panic-buying and the price of basic foodstuffs has jumped.

Russia’s deputy prime minister Viktor Zubkov insists that the ban won’t affect the country’s long-term export market:

The ban is temporary so we have all grounds to retain, in the long term, the leading positions on the international grain market.

In this video, Medvedev explains the impact of the grain damage and the reasons behind the ban:

Smog is back

Meanwhile, the thick smog from peat fires outside Moscow has returned to the capital for the second time in a month, after a brief respite. City residents have been advised to wear face masks and to avoid spending time outdoors.

The heat and the increased carbon monoxide levels in the city have taken their toll, with one doctor reporting up to 17 people dying each day.

The smog has been blamed for doubling the death rate in the city, and experts fear the fires will cause radioactive particles to be blown from the Chernobyl fallout zone towards Moscow.

Russian wheat ban takes effect
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  • Russia Fires

    A local resident, one of the volunteers enlisted to help firefighters, battles a grassfire near the village of Velino, some 140 km (87 miles) east of Moscow, Saturday, Aug. 14, 2010.Source: AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev
  • Russia Fires

    Firefighters battle a forest fire near the village of Velino, some 140 km (87 miles) east of Moscow.Source: AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev
  • Russia Fires

    Vasily, no second name given, looks through a window of his apartment at the village of Mokhovoye destroyed by a forest fire two week ago near the town of Lukhovitsy some 135 km (84 miles) southeast of Moscow.Source: AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin
  • Russia Wheat Woes

    In this Saturday, July 31, 2010, file photo a field of unidentified cereals burning near the town of Voronezh some 500 km (294 miles) south of Moscow, after after weeks of searing heat and practically no rain.Source: AP Photo / Mikhail Metzel
  • Russia Fires

    Workers construct houses for the homeless residents of the village of Mokhovoye destroyed by a forest fire two weeks ago, outside the site of the fire.Source: AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin