The Oklahoman

India open to exporting wheat to needy nations

- Ashok Sharma

NEW DELHI – India on Sunday said it would keep a window open to export wheat to food-deficit countries at the government level despite restrictio­ns announced two days earlier.

India’s Commerce Secretary B.V.R. Subrahmany­am told reporters the government will also allow private companies to meet previous commitment­s to export nearly 4.3 million tons of wheat until July. India exported 1 million tons of wheat in April.

India mainly exports wheat to neighborin­g countries like Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka.

A notice in the government gazette by the Directorat­e of Foreign Trade on Friday said a spike in global prices for wheat was threatenin­g the food security of India and neighborin­g and vulnerable countries.

A key aim of restrictio­ns on exports is to control rising domestic prices. Global wheat prices have risen by more than 40% since the beginning of the year.

Before the war, Ukraine and Russia accounted for a third of global wheat and barley exports. Since Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion, Ukraine’s ports have been blocked and civilian infrastruc­ture and grain silos have been destroyed.

At the same time, India’s own wheat harvest has suffered from a record-shattering heat wave that is stunting production.

He said India’s wheat production this year has come down by three million tons from 106 million tons last year. Wheat prices have shot up by 2040% in India.

“The current rise in prices seems to be a panic reaction rather than a reaction based on a genuine collapse in supply or a sudden shooting of demand,” Subrahmany­am said.

Even though it is the world’s second-largest producer of wheat, India consumes most of the wheat it produces. It had set a goal of exporting 10 million tons of the grain in 20222023, looking to capitalize on the global disruption­s to wheat supplies from the war and find new markets for its wheat in Europe, Africa and Asia.

 ?? CHANNI ANAND/AP FILE ?? An Indian farmer carries wheat harvested from a field on the outskirts of Jammu, India.
CHANNI ANAND/AP FILE An Indian farmer carries wheat harvested from a field on the outskirts of Jammu, India.

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