However, India imported 1.52 mt of edible
oil in June 2024 against 1.31 mt in June 2023, recording a growth of 16.46 per
cent.Data compiled by Solvent
Extractors’ Association of India (SEA) showed that there was decline in the
import of palm oil and soyabean oil during the first eight months of the oil
year 2023-24.
BV Mehta, Executive Director of SEA, said
overall palm oil (including crude palm oil and RBD palmolein) imports decreased
to 5.7 mt in the first eight months of oil year 2023-24 from 6.03 mt in the
corresponding period of the previous year. India imported 1.38 mt of refined
oil (RBD palmolein) during November-June of oil year 2023-24 against 1.40 mt in
the corresponding period of the previous oil year.
Soyabean oil import to India stood at 1.86
mt during first eight months of oil year 2023-24 (2.48 mt during November-June
2022-23). However, sunflower oil import
to India increased to 2.46 mt during November-June 2023-24 (1.85 mt).
Mehta said the share of palm oil in the
overall edible oil imports decreased marginally to 57 per cent during the first
eight months of oil year 2023-24 from 58 per cent in the corresponding period
of the previous oil year. The share of soft oils in the overall edible oil
imports increased marginally to 43 per cent (42 per cent) during the period.
Indonesia
and Malaysia were the major suppliers of RBD palmolein and crude palm oil to
India. During November-June of 2023-24,
Indonesia exported 1.99 mt of crude palm oil and 1.17 mt of RBD palmolein,
followed by Malaysia at 1.77 mt of crude palm oil and 0.2 mt of RBD palmolein.
India imported 1.05 mt of crude soyabean
de-gummed oil from Argentina, followed 0.62 mt from Brazil.
During the first eight months of the oil
year 2023-24, Russia exported 1.17 mt of crude sunflower oil to India. This was
followed by Romania at 0.6 mt, Ukraine at 0.35 mt, and Argentina 0.24 mt.
Mehta said: “We are confident that this year’s Budget will focus on agriculture
and launch the National Mission on Edible Oils with adequate financial support
to boost oilseed production and increase availability of edible oils, thereby
reducing our dependence on imports. In line with this, SEA has prepared a
pre-Budget memorandum, particularly emphasising on raising the duty difference
between crude and refined oils from 7.5 per cent to 15 per cent.”
Current duty on crude edible oils should
be raised from current level of 5 per cent to 20 pe cent, and refined oil be
raised to 35 per cent gradually. Such a move will help support the domestic
farmers and boost the overall production of oilseeds to reduce India’s import
dependence to 15-20 per cent in the next 10 years, he added.