The price of Paddy (Dhan) Basmati 1509 variety has fallen
to ₹ 2700 per quintal in the last two days. Last year, the price of a
good quality of 1509 (Dhan) Basmati had reached upto ₹ 3500 per
quintal. This too has worried basmati rice farmers as the big exporters
and millers have reduced the quantum of this variety they earlier used to buy
in the grain markets. About 25
per cent of basmati rice exported from India is sent to Iran, which is being
badly affected due to the uncertainty. All India Rice Exporters Association
General Secretary Ajay Bhalotia said the Israel-Iran conflict has the “basmati
rice industry in jeopardy”.
“Of the total basmati rice exported from India, 25
percent is exported to Iran while 20 percent goes to Iraq. The combined value
for these countries is more than two million tonnes whose value is more than
two billion dollars. If this export is not done, then the farmers’ profit in
the fields will be reduced to half,” he said.
Mr
Bhalotia also claimed that insurance companies have “stopped giving insurance
on exports to Iran”. “The possibilities of export to Iran have been closed due
to this,” he said. “We request the government to ask the
insurance companies to give us insurance so that we can do some amount of
exports to Iran and Iraq and provide fair prices to the farmers for their
produce,” he added.
Just last month, India removed the floor price for
basmati rice exports to spur orders from the Middle East, Europe, and the
Americas.
The minimum export price or MEP posed a barrier to
exporting certain basmati rice grades, and its removal opened up opportunities
for global buyers to access the full range of options, said top basmati rice
exporters.
India
is the leading grower and exporter of basmati rice to the global market,
followed by neighbouring Pakistan. The
conflict between Iran and Israel escalated after the latter killed Hezbollah
chief Hassan Nasrallah, in an airstrike last week that flattened a Beirut
neighbourhood.