India ready to supply wheat to Indonesia for Palm Oil

Finance    14-Jun-2022
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Delhi, Jun 14: India may permit the export of wheat to meet Indonesia’s food grain demand through an arrangement where the Southeast Asian nation supplies palm oil without any interruption at a competitive rate to address India’s concerns over the shortage of edible oil, one of the key factors powering inflation, two people aware of the matter said, asking not to be named.
 

Palm Oil 
 
Although India has banned the export of wheat last month to assure its adequate availability domestically even as global wheat prices have skyrocketed due to supply concerns, it has kept the option of exports open through government-to-government (G2G) deals, the two added.
 
 
 
India imposed a ban on wheat exports on May 13 “with immediate effect”. Indonesia’s ban on palm oil exports on April 28 lasted for three weeks. Palm oil, inexpensive when compared to other edible oils, is a preferred cooking medium in India. In 2020-21, India imported 133.5 lakh tonnes of edible oil, out of which the share of palm oil was around 56%. While again allowing exports on May 23 amid domestic protests, Jakarta has now put in place several safeguards, and there is no guarantee that the ban will not return, they said. Indonesia is keen on importing Indian wheat, which is possible only through a G2G deal according to the Directorate General of Foreign Trade’s (DGFT) notification on May 13, one of the two people said. Jakarta’s ban on palm oil exports ( Indonesia accounts for about one-third of all vegetable oil exports) majorly impacted Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India resulting in a significant price rise of edible oil, the second person added. “Even though Indonesia has eased exports of palm oil, a G2G deal may ensure that there will be no sudden disruption in the supply of the edible oil to India even in the future. Besides, it may also ensure a competitive rate,” this person explained. “The government’s top priority is to ensure an assured and adequate supply of essential food items such as edible oil to calm the inflation,” the first person said.
 
 
The people cited above and experts said India is highly dependent on the import of edible oil and it must secure a favorable supply contract with Indonesia because the global geopolitical situation is uncertain and the Ukraine war may prolong to push up food prices further. India’s retail inflation surged to a 95-month high at 7.8% in April, which is well above RBI’s official upper tolerance level of 6% for the fourth consecutive month. For May, the headline number came in at 7.04%.