Skip to main content
Emerging Challenge: No Basmati Rice Exports to Iran (1.4 Million Ton or 30% Export) - How to Protect Basmati Paddy Farmer’s Price in Kharif 2020?


A leading listed Basmati rice company’s annual general meeting noted in May 2019 that there is still a sizable surplus of funds available in the escrow account of UCO Bank to export Iran and orders also flowing.  India had stopped importing Iranian crude oil from May 2019.  In an October 2019 estimate, there was Rs. 2,000 Cr worth payment of basmati rice exporters stuck to Iran. A press statement of UCO Bank (January 2020) reads that there is no problem for exporters till the fiscal end (March 2020). The DGCIS statistics towards Iran exports between April to January 2020 reads Rs. 19,660 Cr.  Big questions: Is the money in UCO Bank Escrow Account enough to pay exporters? How many exporters are still to receive payment? Are the basmati rice exporters going to face second wave of NPA?



Now there is no Iran oil trade for the UCO Bank to receive the payment from oil marketing companies and pay Basmati rice exporters. In future, if Indian exporters are going to sell basmati rice to Iran, will they route the consignments through Dubai to Iran? Whether history is going to repeat?  The situation is Catch 22, the size of Iranian basmati rice export market is 1.4 Million Ton or 30% in total exports of Indian Basmati rice.  The Basmati rice-sowing season is just in doorstep. If there is no access to the Iran market and if the over production or supply of 30% of basmati paddy happens, the farm income will get depressed due to lower price realization.  It is an important moment for the Central and the State government to intervene and derisk Basmati rice trade through appropriate policy measures on variety or crop pattern and crop acreage in a careful manner. 

Comments

  1. Hi, If there is Pandemic situation continuous then we need to fill 1.30 billion people and demand for petroleum products also down by at least 20 percent, in my opinion in this scenario priority of export Rice will be change.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Basmati Rice Exporters NPA Rs. 32,994 Cr (USD 4.4 Billion): A Soul Search and the Truth I confess, this is a long blog.   To read the gist, kindly go to the   “ Lessons ”. Once the Grand Trunk Road from Delhi to Chandigarh housed number of Basmati rice mills and bustling export activities happened with greater number of employments.   Now several basmati rice mills are shut in this area. Out of 22 basmati rice exporters, whose default to the Bank is of worth Rs. 32,994 Cr,   7 exporters were among top 10 exporting companies between 2003 to 2008.   India has lost 7 important exporting companies in the last decade.   One of the India’s oldest basmati rice brands – Pari lost its eminent market position due to tax and other regulatory issues in the late 1990’s. The present issue is not about compliance. The fall or defaulting of REI Agro, one of the largest business houses of basmati rice, began in the year 2013. Till the visi...
RCEP Trade Deal: the New Gun Boat Diplomacy? Will it Fit in Atma Nirbhar Bharat?  A new swadeshi movement of 21 st century through “Atma Nirbhar Bharat” in the height of Covid19 pandemic On June 8, 2020, it could be said that most of the economic activities have begun.  The consumption of India declined to 40% in the April 2020.   The partial opening up of activities had further pushed up the economic engine of the country but it is not to the level that of pre-covid19.   We would remember, by September 2019, the newspapers were carrying scary stories such as economic distress, declining capacity utilization and growth, unemployment, NPA, etc. The editors, statisticians and economists were busy in benchmarking economic growth with various periods before precovid19.   Finance Minister announced the stimulus packages in September and October 2019 to address such problems. Now the same editors, statisticians and economists are busy in writing abou...

Now and Then Food Security and Need of a Virtual Water Trade Policy

The Crop Planning Sub-Committee of British India Government in 1934 ordered for a halt to any further expansion of rice cultivation and protective measures had to be adopted to check imports of wheat and rice during the period of depression.  But the situation had changed altogether since 1937 when Burma was separated from India, an action that had placed Mainland’s (India) food position in serious jeopardy. Whether the Crop Planning Sub-Committee was politically disconnected about Burma separation or keen to create artificial demand for rice, it is still a mystery! Is the Rice Commissioner by British India appointed to create Demand - Supply gap for profiteering? The export of rice from India dropped to nil during separation of Burma from British India in the year 1937, which led India to become a net importer of this product to tune of 1.8 Million Ton. With effective from September 1943, all imports as well as exports of c...