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The world's cooking-oil supply is facing an unprecedented shortage as the Ukraine war cuts off a crucial supplier. Here's how 6 countries are handling the strain.

  • The war in Ukraine is disrupting strained global supply chains.
  • One commodity that has been hit is cooking oil. Together, Ukraine and Russia supply lots of it.
Jump to a specific country:
US | UK | Indonesia | Germany | Netherlands | India

The global cooking-oil supply is taking a hit from the war in Ukraine, and it's being felt all over the world, from Indonesian markets to fish-and-chips shops in the UK.

Russia and Ukraine collectively export close to two-thirds of the world's sunflower oil, a main ingredient in many packaged and prepared foods, which has made finding sunflower and other vegetable oils more difficult, putting more pressure on a market already strained by extreme weather and droughts.

International consumers are struggling to stock up or find replacements: Shelves in Spain are empty, consumers in India are buying in bulk, and grocery stores in the UK have limited the number of bottles people can buy.

The cooking-oil market was further rocked when Indonesia, which normally exports more palm oil than any country in the world, decided to ban sending palm oil abroad in response to shortages of edible oils at home. The ramifications aren't only global — palm oil is Indonesia's top export.

If you can find cooking oil, the price has gone up. The UN's FAO Food Price Index, which tracks the prices of five commodity groups, hit an all-time high in March, with cooking oil prices rising faster than cereals, dairy, meat, or sugar. In April, the index was down slightly from the prior month's record.

One fish-and-chips shop owner in northwest England told Insider that his monthly expenses for cooking oil alone have risen by more than £500 (or $617) since Russia invaded Ukraine.

With the world's supply under duress, the things people buy, cook, and eat in restaurants are affected. The sting is sharper for food-industry workers or lower-income groups struggling to make ends meet.

Insider reporters from around the world detailed what a shortage of cooking oil looks like on the ground in the US, UK, Indonesia, Germany, the Netherlands, and India.

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