Tomato prices fall sharply, onion also dips
Tomato prices declined by up to 71 per cent over the last four weeks on a sharp increase in arrivals following farmers’ attempts to harvest the halfripened vegetable to cash in on the spurt.
The price of fresh tomato in the Mumbai wholesale markets slumped to ~22 a kg on Thursday from ~75 a kg a month ago. Prices fell by over 18 per cent in the Delhi wholesale mandi to trade at ~35 a kg from ~42.5 a kg on July 24.
Prices of tomato and onion and other green vegetables had spiked in the middle of July due to heavy rainfall.
“Farmers across the country have started harvesting the pre-matured crop. Tomato farmers have increased supply from Karnataka, Telangana and Gujarat. Supply from Maharashtra has also started,” said Shri Ram Gadhave, president, Vegetables Grower Association of India.
Tomato prices had hit a record ~100 in retail markets, which prompted the government to call for a contingency plan. Farmers were asked to bring in their early harvested crop for better realisation.
Early this year, farmers dumped a huge quantity of tomato on roads and also left some of the crop unharvested as realisation dipped to ~1 a kg. Large farmers and stockists failed to store the commodity in cold storages, resulting in a shortage in July.
“Tomato supply has started coming in from all across the country. Farmers in Maharashtra have also reported a huge quantity of harvest of pre-matured crop,” said an official with the Agricultural Produce Markets Committee (APMC), Vashi, near Mumbai. Halfripened tomato is being sold at ~20-22 a kg in wholesale markets.
The agriculture ministry projects India’s tomato output at 19.69 million tonnes in 2016-17 (July-June), up from 18.73 million tonnes in the previous year.
Onion traded at ~17 a kg in the Lasalgaon mandi on Thursday, a decline of 31 per cent from its recent peak of ~24.50 a kg on August 10. To prevent a further price rise, Union Food Minister Ram Vilas Paswan had recommended a minimum export price and stock limits on onion.
India’s onion output is projected at 21.56 million tonnes in 2016-17, up from 20.93 million tonnes a year ago.
Ajit Shah, president of the Horticulture Exporters Association, however, sees no major exports happening at the current price of onion.
According to the National Horticulture Research and Development Foundation, India’s onion exports tripled to 3.49 million tonnes in 201617 from 1.11 million tonnes in the previous year.
Tomato prices had hit a record ~100 in retail markets, which prompted the government to call for a contingency plan. Farmers were asked to bring in their early harvested crop for better realisation