Arab Times

India’s rice, soymeal exports to Iran may be casualties of deal

Pakistan may recoup lost share in basmati rice exports

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MUMBAI, Nov 27, (RTRS): India’s near-monopoly in rice and soymeal exports to Iran could break following Tehran’s nuclear deal with the West which is expected to pave the way for rival suppliers to boost their trading with the oil-rich country.

The landmark deal struck between the Islamic Republic and six world powers on Sunday eases some of the sanctions on trade with Iran that have slashed the OPEC member’s oil exports by more than half and narrowed its options to secure food and agricultur­e goods to just a few countries.

The sanctions forced India to trim oil purchases from Iran, but it remained a loyal and large customer. In 2012 as sanctions stalled dollar payments, it started settling part of its oil debt in rupees and Iran was using those to buy goods from India.

That trade in rupees gave India an edge over other rice and soymeal suppliers such as Pakistan and Brazil who do not have such huge debts with Tehran and quickly the south Asian country establishe­d a near-monopoly in exports.

“Rice exports to Iran rose as India had an advantage over other suppliers in payment mechanism. As sanctions are easing, India has to become much more competitiv­e to retain the share,” R.S. Seshadri, director of Gurgaon-based rice exporter Tilda Riceland, told Reuters.

“Pakistan, Thailand lost share, but they can start grabbing that share again once financial institutio­ns start trade with Iran in dollar terms,” he said.

India’s rice exports to Tehran, mainly of the basmati variety, surged 80 percent in the year ended March 31, 2013 from a year ago to 1.1 million tonnes. During the same period, shipments of soymeal jumped nearly four-fold to 886,776 tonnes.

Iran’s difficulti­es in securing rice and soymeal from other producers due to the sanctions prompted Indian exporters to seek hefty premiums over global prices, sometimes as high as 20 percent. But that premium has to come down now.

“Dollar trade would end India’s monopoly. We can’t take Iran for granted. We need to rationalis­e our prices,” said a rice exporter based in the northern state of Punjab, who did not want to be named.

Like India, Pakistan was a leading rice supplier to Iran as it had a freight advantage, but due to the Western sanctions its shipments dwindled last year.

But as restrictio­ns are set to ease, “Pakistan can become a major player as it has a logistical advantage over India”, Seshadri of Tilda Riceland said.

“Rupee payment helped India in increasing soymeal shipments. Iran is paying higher prices compared to other buyers,” said Rajesh Agrawal, chief coordinato­r at the Soybean Processors’ Associatio­n of India (SOPA), a trade body.

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