Citing recent events in Black Sea grain trade, the Eurasia head of the International Association of Operative Millers said there is reason to believe Türkiye can be a safe grain transit hub or even storage point.
Like the East-West energy corridor, there is a North-South corridor in grain, Eren Günhan Ulusoy told Anadolu Agency (AA), adding that the former Soviet republics bordering the Black Sea produce and export grain, which puts Türkiye in an important position in the grain market.
Türkiye also boasts a strong infrastructure with storage and discharge capacity at its ports and a licensed warehousing capacity of 8.5 million tons, he noted.
Touching on this summer's historic grain corridor agreement, he said when the world faced a crisis, Türkiye played its diplomatic role well to reopen the corridor.
Türkiye, the United Nations, Russia and Ukraine signed the agreement on July 22 in Istanbul to resume Black Sea grain exports, which were paused after the Russia-Ukraine war began in February.
And when Russia briefly exited the deal, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan helped bring it back.
While the agreement is set to expire on Nov. 19, with hopes it will be renewed, Türkiye has already taken responsibility for the security and control of the grain corridor, he underlined.
With its storage capacity, Türkiye can store grain from the Black Sea and transport them to the world from safe ports.
"Why do we call them safe harbors? Today the grain corridor is open, but sending and loading ships under conditions of war isn't easy, as ports were bombed and missiles were dropped," he said.
After the product is swiftly brought to Türkiye, ships can access world markets from many Turkish ports, including Samsun, Tekirdağ, Izmir, Mersin and Iskenderun, he said.
Türkiye is an important agricultural country that produces 35-38 million tons of grain annually and 19-20 million tons of wheat, while both barley and corn production are at 8 million tons each, he added.
He said Türkiye is also the largest flour exporter in the world.
Citing Russia's statement that some 500,000 tons of wheat could be sent to poor countries, Ulusoy said this would amount to humanitarian aid worth $200 million.
Over the last three months, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) has already granted 180,000 tons of wheat to disadvantaged countries.
"We can't solve the hunger problem with 500,000 tons, that won't end hunger, but of course, every effort to reduce hunger is valuable," he said.
"We need the fall in prices brought by the regulation of the supply-demand balance in the world."
He also said Türkiye is an important supplier to the WFP as it is a country close to regions in need, such as in Africa and the Middle East.
The WFP is currently processing the grain in Türkiye, procuring raw material through the grain corridor, producing food in Türkiye and sending it to regions in need, he said.
Ulusoy is also the head of Ulusoy Gıda, Türkiye's fourth-largest food company, which officially opened its new flour factory last week in the country's Black Sea province of Samsun.
The factory, which can process 2,085 tons of grain daily, has a storage area for 70,000 tons of grain and 12,000 tons of flour.
The high-tech factory was built in a strategic location close to Samsun's ports.