Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Uncertaint­y over wheat export as output dips

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: There is confusion over India’s estimated wheat output this year after a severe heatwave in March cut yields of the main winter staple that the country was hoping to export in large quantities to fill a global shortage due to the Ukraine war.

There could be a potential tight domestic supply situation in a year of a global food crisis, analysts told HT.

Wheat prices have risen to record levels, rising an annual 6.95% in April, the highest in a decade, on the back of lower output and brisk buying by private traders at higher than the government’s minimum support price of ₹2,015 a quintal (100 kg) in anticipati­on of robust export demand.

An emerging issue, according to analysts, is whether India can afford to export wheat without restrictio­ns, and if the country will witness a further spike in domestic food prices.

India exported a record 7.85 million tonnes in the financial year to March, up 275% from a year ago. A crimped output has now cast doubts over India’s wheat export potential.

Wheat production is expected to be 105 million tonne, 5.7% down from a record 111.32 million tonne forecast in February, according to the government’s revised estimates.

Yield drops have been large in some states, ranging between 15-20%, according to reports from farmers and traders, and India could end up with an even smaller wheat crop of about 90-95 million tonne.

The government expects its own purchases to drop to a 15-year low of 19.5 million tonne, down from a targeted 44 million tonne.

The government needs 30.5 million tonne for subsidised food distributi­on to nearly 800 million Indians, other welfare schemes and the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana, the Covid-relief free foodgrain scheme in force till September 2022.

“With opening stocks of 19 million tonne, and an expected procuremen­t of 18 million tonne, the government will have 37.5 million tonne of wheat available for 2022-23,” said Ramandeep Singh Mann, a farm expert.

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