Deccan Chronicle

Nepal’s refiners struggle as India stops palm oil imports

- GOPAL SHARMA & RAJENDRA JADHAV

Edible oil refiners in Nepal have all but stopped buying crude palm oil amid surging domestic stockpiles after top buyer India suspended most imports of refined oil from the country, industry officials told Reuters.

New Delhi in May suspended 39 oil import licences to slow duty-free shipments from neighbouri­ng nations, disrupting refiners in Nepal, which had thrived thanks to preferenti­al access India’s huge market.

“Refiners are not importing fresh crude palm oil but we have to take (delivery) of the stock which is in transit,” said Amit Sarda, director at Pashupati Oil Industries, a leading refiner and exporter based at Nepal’s industrial town of Biratnagar.

Palm oil stockpiles in Nepal have swelled to 70,000 tonnes, overwhelmi­ng local demand needs, he said.

As a result, Nepal’s crude palm imports had plunged to less than 7,000 tonnes per month by mid to

June from around 21,000 tonnes earlier in 2020, according to government data.

India accounts for nearly two-thirds of Nepal’s trade and is its sole fuel supplier. The ties between Nepal and India have strained lately following a territoria­l dispute.

Nepal’s palm oil refining industry emerged in response to India’s steep refined oil import taxes, which were raised to 54 per cent in 2018 to promote domestic refiners.

The hike spurred oil refiners to set up plants in neighbouri­ng countries and then sell refined oil into India tax-free under the South Asian Free Trade Agreement (Safta).

Around 30 billion Nepali rupees ($250 million) were invested to set up 19 refining units in Nepal alone, according to trade body Nepal Ghee and Oil Associatio­n.

Nepal’s palm oil exports to India rose from zero to

45,667 tonnes in the 201819 fiscal year, and then to

189,078 tonnes in 2019-20, according to India’s commerce ministry.

These refiners may not be able to repay bank loans if the Indian ban remains in place, said Sarda.

Sumit Deb has been appointed as the chairman and managing director of National Mineral Developmen­t Corporatio­n. A personnel ministry order said Deb, at present director (personnel), will have tenure till Feb. 28, 2023.

SBI General Insurance appointed Prakash Chandra Kandpal as its new MD &CEO, effective July 20. He has been with firm as the deputy CEO since June 2019.

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