The Jerusalem Post

India halts wheat exports as heat wave hurts crops, prices at home soar

Ban could push grain’s global price to new highs

- • By RAJENDRA JADHAV, MAYANK BHARDWAJ

MUMBAI (Reuters) – India banned wheat exports on Saturday, days after saying it was targeting record shipments this year, as a scorching heat wave curtailed output and domestic prices hit a record high.

The government said it would still allow exports backed by already-issued letters of credit and to countries that request supplies “to meet their food security needs.”

The move to ban overseas shipments was not in perpetuity and could be revised, senior government officials told a press conference.

Global buyers were banking on supplies from the world’s second-biggest wheat producer after exports from the Black Sea region plunged following Russia’s February 24 invasion of Ukraine. Before the ban, India had aimed to ship a record 10 million tonnes this year.

The officials added that there was no dramatic fall in wheat output this year, but unregulate­d exports had led to a rise in local prices.

“We don’t want wheat trade to happen in an unregulate­d manner or hoarding to happen,” commerce secretary BVR Subrahmany­am told reporters in New Delhi.

Although it is not one of the world’s top wheat exporters, India’s ban could drive global prices of Wv1 wheat to new peaks given already tight supply, hitting poor consumers in Asia and Africa particular­ly hard.

“The ban is shocking,” a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm said. “We were expecting curbs on exports after two to three months, but it seems like the inflation numbers changed the government’s mind.”

Rising food and energy prices pushed India’s annual retail inflation close to an eight-year high in April, strengthen­ing expectatio­ns that the central bank would raise interest rates more aggressive­ly.

Wheat prices in India have risen to record highs, in some spot markets hitting 25,000 rupees ($320) per tonne, well above the government’s minimum support price of 20,150 rupees ($260).

Rising fuel, labor, transporta­tion and packaging costs are also boosting the price of wheat flour in India.

“It was not wheat alone. The rise in overall prices raised concerns about inflation – and that’s why the government

had to ban wheat exports,” said another senior government official who asked not to be named as discussion­s about export curbs were private. “For us, it’s [exercising an] abundance of caution.”

INDIA THIS week outlined its record export target for the fiscal year that started on April 1, saying it would send trade delegation­s to countries such as Morocco, Tunisia, Indonesia and the Philippine­s to explore ways to boost shipments.

In February, the government forecast production of 111.32 million tonnes (122.7 tons), the sixth straight record crop, but it cut the forecast to 105 m. tonnes (116 m. tons) in May.

A spike in temperatur­es in mid-March means the crop could instead be around 100 million tonnes (110 m. tons) or even lower, said a New Delhi-based dealer with a global trading firm.

“The government’s procuremen­t has fallen more than 50%,” the dealer said. “Spot markets are getting far lower supplies than last year. All these things are indicating a lower crop.”

Cashing in on a rally in global wheat prices after Russia invaded Ukraine, India exported a record seven million tonnes of wheat in the fiscal year to March, up more than 250% from the previous year.

“The rise in wheat price was rather moderate, and Indian prices are still substantia­lly lower than global prices,” said Rajesh Paharia Jain, a New Delhi-based

trader.

“Wheat prices in some parts of the country had jumped to the current level even last year, so the move to ban export is nothing but a knee-jerk reaction.”

Despite a drop in production and government purchases by the state-run Food Corporatio­n of India, the country could have shipped at least 10 million

tonnes of wheat this fiscal year, Jain said.

The FCI has so far bought a little over 19 million tonnes of wheat from domestic farmers, against last year’s total purchases of a record 43.34 million tonnes. It buys grain from local farmers to run a food welfare program for the poor.

Unlike previous years, farmers have preferred to sell wheat

to private traders, who offered better prices than the government’s fixed rate.

In April, India exported a record 1.4 million tonnes of wheat, and deals were already signed to export around 1.5 million tonnes in May.

“The Indian ban will lift global wheat prices,” another dealer said. “Right now, there is no big supplier in the market.”

 ?? (Amit Dave/file photo/Reuters) ?? A COMBINE HARVESTER deposits wheat in a tractor trolley at a field on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India.
(Amit Dave/file photo/Reuters) A COMBINE HARVESTER deposits wheat in a tractor trolley at a field on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel