Mint Hyderabad

Onion prices on ascent, Centre may extend exports clampdown

- Puja Das puja.das@livemint.com NEW DELHI

Asharp rise in onion prices in the middle of an export ban has prompted the Centre to consider extending the restrictio­n beyond 31 March, a senior official aware of the matter said.

At ₹33.34 a kg, the all-India average onion price in the retail market was 41.3% higher than the previous year on Wednesday, data from the consumer affairs ministry showed.

“It (the ban’s extension) could be either till June or September; the possibilit­y is more till June as elections will be around that time, and the government certainly cannot afford prices of food commoditie­s, especially onion, to go up,” the official said on condition of anonymity. “Once the elections are over, the government may review the decision whether to extend the ban further, depending on the market situation.”

The Centre clamped down on onion exports in December, after imposing a 40% export duty in August and hiking the minimum export price to $800 per tonne. The decision was taken amid concerns over domestic production shortfall caused by irregular rainfall, pushing prices up.

The latest developmen­t comes in the backdrop of the country’s falling onion production playing out on prices.

Onion output in the 2023-24 crop year (July-June) will fall 15.6% to 25.4 million tonnes, according to the agricultur­e ministry’s latest estimates, because key growing regions such as Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan received weak rainfall last summer.

Queries sent to the ministries of agricultur­e & farmers welfare, and consumer affairs, food & public distributi­on remained unanswered at press time.

Last week, the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on (WMO) said the 2023-24 El Nino was among the five strongest on record and will continue to impact global climate in the coming months despite a weakening trend. The UN agency also said above-normal temperatur­es are predicted over almost all land areas between March and May.

“Every month since June 2023 has set a new monthly temperatur­e record—and 2023

was, by far, the warmest year on record. El Nino has contribute­d to these record temperatur­es, but heat-trapping greenhouse gases are unequivoca­lly the main culprit,” said WMO secretary-general Celeste Saulo.

Erratic rains sparked a price shock in onion last year. Average retail prices of the kitchen staple started inching up from July 2023 and reached a peak of ₹80 a kg in November. This was caused by 8-10% lower acreage under kharif onion year-onyear (y-o-y), coupled with the adverse impact of unseasonal rainfall on onion yields in Maharashtr­a. This prompted the government to ban its exports and deploy cooperativ­e bodies to sell it at subsidized prices.

Late kharif onion varieties typically cater to consumer demand for January and February. However, reported lower arrivals of the late kharif varieties towards the second half of February this year led to a price hike of 29% y-o-y.

Now, the lower rabi or winter onion sowing and, thereby, a fall in output this year could lift prices further and put upward pressure on inflation, farm experts said. “Despite the anticipate­d arrival of rabi onion from March, onion prices are expected to remain firm going forward,” said Pushan Sharma, director-Research, Crisil Market Intelligen­ce and Analytics. “This can be attributed to lower acreages under crop in key states of Maharashtr­a and Karnataka on account of lower reservoir levels during the sowing and transplant­ing period for rabi 2024.”

Additional­ly, a government plan to acquire buffer stock as insurance against price rise might keep the onion market tight, according to traders.

“When government agencies like Nafed and NCCF start procuring onion for its 500,000 tonne-buffer stock, there could be supply tightness in the market as farmers will be keen on selling off their produce to them. Traders and exporters purchase separately. Overall, this could lead to price rise amid lower output,” said Sanket Hoge, a Mumbai-based agri-export consultant.

Retail food inflation rose to 8.66% in February 2024, from 8.3% the previous month and 6% a year ago due to a sequential rise in vegetable and meat prices.

 ?? MINT ?? Govt banned onion exports in December, after imposing a 40% export duty in Aug.
MINT Govt banned onion exports in December, after imposing a 40% export duty in Aug.
 ?? PTI ?? Erratic rains sparked a price shock in onion last year.
PTI Erratic rains sparked a price shock in onion last year.

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