logo

After 20 years, India to import rice

Friday, 20 November 2009


NEW DELHI, Nov 19 (PTI): India, a traditional rice exporter, will import the grain for the first time in 20 years to meet a projected shortfall of the crop hit by drought and floods, government said Wednesday.
"We started rice season that is from October 2009 with almost six million tonnenes of surplus... Still there is a projection that there is some shortfall of Kharif crops. So to make it up, we have to make some imports," Finance Minister of India Pranab Mukherjee said just two days ahead of the ministerial meeting to review foodgrain stocks and prices.
Mukherjee, who heads the Empowered Group of Ministers (EGoM) on foodgrains, however, did not reveal the quantum and the timing of imports.
"Exactly what quantum and at what time, I can't say," he said on the sidelines of a Union Bank of India function here.
The government estimates that there would be a shortfall of over 15 million tonnes in the 2009-10 Kharif (summer) season due to drought and floods in several states.
According to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), India, the second largest rice producer in the world, may import as much as 2,00,000 tonnenes of rice if there is greater price parity to meet domestic demand.
Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma, who is a member of the EGoM, said Wednesday that the government was in talks with top rice-exporting countries like Thailand for buying the staple grain without involving the private traders.