Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Aug 25, 2006


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Rice
Agri-Biz & Commodities - Exports & Imports
A tale of two cereals

Harish Damodaran

Non-basmati exports rising steadily; to cross $1 b this year

New Delhi , Aug 24

There cannot be a more contrasting tale of two fine cereals. While precarious stocks and costly imports of wheat are giving the Centre sleepless nights, it is just the reverse where rice is concerned. Not only are stocks ruling above buffer norms, there is also an unprecedented export boom under way.

"We see non-basmati exports alone crossing $1 billion this fiscal," said Mr Karan Chanana, Managing Director of Amira Foods (India) Ltd and General Secretary of the All India Rice Exporters' Association.

In 2005-06, the country exported 39.05 lakh tonnes (lt) of non-basmati rice worth Rs 4,144.03 crore. This is over and above the 11.61 lt of basmati exports worth Rs 3,030.32 crore.

During the last five years, non-basmati exports have jumped five-fold, which has gone unnoticed relative to the high-profile basmati shipments.

The boom in non-basmati started with the Food Corporation of India (FCI) issuing rice to exporters from its overflowing warehouses. Between 2000-01 and 2003-04, some 140 lt was made available from the Central pool for exports.

Since 2004-05, FCI has discontinued supplying grain. But that has not put a brake on exports.

"The market is mostly Africa: Nigeria and South Africa for par-boiled rice (five per cent broken) and the rest of the continent for raw rice (25 per broken)," said Mr Anil Mittal, Chairman of KRBL Ltd.

Interestingly, the 39-40 lt of annual non-basmati rice exports is almost equal to the wheat imports that the State Trading Corporation (STC) has so far contracted for the Centre.

Thus, for each tonne of wheat coming in, an equal amount of rice is going out of the country. That again reflects the contrasting availability position.

As of July 1, rice stocks in the Central pool, at 111.44 lt, were higher than the minimum buffer of 98 lt for that date. For wheat, these stood at 82.07 lt and 171 lt respectively.

Also, while FCI and State agencies procured only 92.23 lt of wheat during the 2006-07 rabi marketing season (April-June), rice purchases in the ongoing 2005-06 season (October-September) have touched 279.22 lt till August 21 and are slated to close at 285 lt.

What is more, with kharif paddy area registering 5.6 per cent increase so far this year, the rice export party is likely to only continue.

Related Stories:
Rice procurement set to touch all-time high
Wheat prices zoom to record Rs 1,000 a quintal
Wheat procurement to hit 10-year low

More Stories on : Rice | Exports & Imports | Wheat

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



PNB

Stories in this Section
A tale of two cereals


Southern flour mills strike deal to buy Australian wheat
`Low' could hit monsoon withdrawal schedule
Bangalore races to become No.1 wireless hotspot
Bharti inks $1-b network expansion deal with Ericsson
ONGC, Shell in talks for upgradation of Kalol field
Oil products consumption up 0.4 pc in July
Meet on VAT compensation package soon
Move to amend textile labour laws
Bosch India plans to add 1,000 employees every year
Sun Micro launches ControlCentre in Chennai
Buying at lower levels props up Sensex; metals shine
Paper stocks up on price rise talk
Helios jumps on bonus hopes
Barclays scouts for more buys
VSNL cuts bandwidth prices


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line