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Digital Desk: Following an anticipated decline in kharif or summer-sown paddy yield due to a weak monsoon in key producing states, India is considering banning the export of rice in order to protect its "national food security" and to control grain prices, according to an official knowledgeable of the issue.

 

White broken rice exports will be prohibited under a plan being considered by the ministries of trade and food, the source said, noting that other types and premium basmati rice would still be exported..

 

Poor rains will also reduce output, forcing many farmers in places where rice is grown to switch late to other crops. According to the person who was quoted above, the government is thinking about banning the export of white broken rice only because doing so would ensure that domestic demand was adequately met and because there is a high estimate of global demand for this type of rice due to drought in many regions of the world.

 

India is a significant rice exporter, as opposed to wheat. Nearly 22 million tonnes of rice, or about a sixth of its total output, were exported by the nation in 2021–2022. 40% of the rice shipments in the world come from India.

 

The country's paddy crop has been completely destroyed by a patchy monsoon in a number of regions, including Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, and Jharkhand. According to government estimates, the overall area sown with paddy, the main summer staple, has decreased by 7.6% to 36 million hectares from the 39 million hectares sown at this time last year.

 

Because of the anticipated lower production, rice prices will increase above minimum support rates, according to Rahul Chauhan, an analyst with commodity trading company IGrain Pvt Ltd.

 

After a sweltering early summer reduced wheat output by an estimated 2.5%, the nation outlawed private wheat exports in May.


Even though a typical monsoon was predicted, the states where paddy is grown experienced insufficient or irregular summer rainfall, which watered just around 60% of crops. Between June 1 and August 26, the rain-bearing system had an 8% overall surplus. Monsoon shortfalls, however, have been roughly 45%, 41%, 27%, and 26% in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, and Jharkhand, respectively.

 

The government-run Food Corporation of India has 41 million tonnes of milled and rice paddy inventories as of August 1; nevertheless, the season's 13.5 million tonnes buffer requirement. India has sufficient cereal reserves, according to the government, to meet its needs for food security.

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