Business Standard

China drops ban on rapeseed meal from India

- Beijing/Mumbai, 22 October

China has dropped a years-long ban on rapeseed meal imports from India as the government seeks to diversify sources of protein used in animal feed, the customs administra­tion said on Monday.

Rapeseed meal shipments from India can resume from Monday if they meet certain inspection and quarantine requiremen­ts, the General Administra­tion of Customs said on its website. The move is China’s latest effort to reduce its reliance on US soybeans, as Beijing and Washington remain locked in an outright trade war.

China buys 60 percent of the soybeans traded worldwide, processing them into soymeal to feed its vast pig herds. Soybeans are the top US agricultur­al export to China by value.

China was the top buyer of Indian rapeseed meal before the ban was imposed in 2011 over quality concerns. As Sino-US trade tensions escalated, India stepped up its lobbying for the restart of a trade worth $161 million in 2011.

Indian rapeseed meal exported to China must be from processing plants inspected and approved by the Export Inspection Council of India, and registered with China's General Administra­tion of Customs, the Chinese body said on its website.

“This is a very good developmen­t that we were expecting. But still exporters need to register with Chinese authoritie­s and it is a lengthy process,” said B V Mehta, executive director of the Solvent Extractor’s Associatio­n of India, an industry body.

India has an ample surplus to export 500,000 tonnes of rapeseed meal to China every year, Mehta said. Rapeseed futures in India jumped more than 1 percent on Monday to ~4,222 ($57.48) per 100 kg. Farmers in India have started planting rapeseed, the country's main winter-sown oilseed crop, a Mumbai-based trader of edible oils said.

“Farmers will expand the area under rapeseed if prices rise in the next few weeks due to Chinese demand,” the trader said.

China imposed tariffs of 25 per cent on a list of American products including soybeans on July 6, in response to US duties on Chinese goods worth a similar amount.

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