Europe revives Syria phosphate imports, profiting Russian firm

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Syrian phosphates used for fertiliser are being exported to Europe in bulk. (Representative pic)
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  • The regime in Syria has since 2015 been heavily backed by Russia in its long-running civil war
  • The trade is growing fast as the war in Ukraine drives up fertiliser and phosphate prices

Syrian phosphates used for fertiliser are being exported to Europe in bulk, benefitting a Russian firm and the sanctions-hit Damascus regime, a report said Thursday.

Italy, Bulgaria, Spain and Poland are among the EU states receiving Syrian phosphates, according to the report by a consortium of investigative journalists led by Lighthouse Reports and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project.

Serbia and Ukraine are also major buyers of Syrian phosphates. Serbia has imported $72 million since 2017, while Ukraine has imported $30 million over the past four years, the investigation said, citing customs documents and trade data.

Italy and Bulgaria resumed trade over the past two years. Spain and Poland started importing Syrian phosphates in January, with the former purchasing around $900,000 and the latter $37,000 so far this year, according to trade data reported to the United Nations.

The regime in Syria has since 2015 been heavily backed by Russia in its long-running civil war.

International sanctions do not ban the import of Syrian phosphates but key Russian and Syrian players involved in the trade are sanctioned by the US or Europe, which raises questions over liability.

The trade is growing fast as the war in Ukraine drives up fertiliser and phosphate prices, raising demand for cheap and high-quality Syrian phosphates which were among the country’s top exports before the outbreak of war in 2011.

The export deals are managed by companies linked to Stroytransgaz, a Russian construction giant that controls Syria’s Tartus port and  state-run fertiliser factories, along with the right to extract and sell phosphates for a period of 50 years from a key mine, according to the report.

Thirty per cent of the revenues from phosphate sales are reserved for the Syrian state, according to experts not involved in the report.

Stroytransgaz is owned by a close associate of President Vladimir Putin. It denies it is working in Syria but the investigation said it found senior officials from the Russian company oversee these contracts.

The sales to Europe are carried out quietly, with cargo ships disabling their tracking systems while heading towards Syria and reappearing en route to Europe later, according to the investigation.

The European sales are propping up a complex network of shell companies and middlemen, including Lebanese shipping company Mediterranean Petroleum and Shipping, the investigation alleged.

Two trading companies managed by a Lebanese businessman have arranged for Syrian phosphates to arrive in Serbia via Romania, according to the report.

Phosphate sales to Europe help line the pockets of Syrian and Russian war profiteers, including a Syrian militia-turned-security company owned by two business figures close to the Damascus regime, the report added.

The report also asserts that the trade boon offers no benefits for Syrian farmers who have struggled since the government scrapped fertiliser subsidies last year amid shortages and price hikes.

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