Announcing the decision, Union Agriculture Minister
Shivaraj Singh Chouhan said an agreement will be signed by the Indonesian
government’s agency Bulog with India’s notified canalising agency NCEL. Sources said that NCEL, which was the nodal agency
to undertake export of non-Basmati rice to friendly countries under permit
system when the shipments were banned, will source the rice from the open
market and sell to Bulog under a price formula.
Though there was some confusion initially regarding
the source of rice to be exported, officials later clarified that there would
be no export from the government-owned buffer stock.
Rice prices in the
global market have firmed up marginally from mid-November after dropping over
10 per cent.
After India removed
rice export curbs in, other countries such as Pakistan and Thailand cut prices
by 10-15 per cent, exporters said. But, rates started rebounding from last week
of November on good demand from the Philippines, where buyers are seeking the
new crop. Even, far-eastern countries
are buying good volume, said exporters adding global prices moved up by
$10/tonne in the second fortnight of November.
India had curbed rice
exports from September 2022, when it banned shipments of broken rice and
imposed a 20 per cent duty on white rice. In July 2023, it banned exports of
white rice and imposed a 20 per cent duty on parboiled shipments. It also fixed
$950/tonne as the minimum export price for basmati. But all curbs were removed
in October 2024.
Despite weather woes, India produced 137.82 million
tonnes (mt) of rice in 2023-24 and this year’s , kharif production has been
estimated at 119.93 mt. Exports of
non-Basmati rice was at 5.77 mt worth $2.79 billion during April-October of
current fiscal, official data show.