India rice export ban may lead to direct govt deals, raises food security concerns
Global rice importers are likely to seek direct deals with governments in exporting countries as India’s ban on shipments of a key variety is squeezing supplies and igniting concerns over food security. Buyers from Africa to Asia are likely to scramble for rice shipments as supplies tighten in coming months following India’s decision last week to ban non-basmati white rice exports.
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app. The ban will cut availability of the staple on world markets by about a fifth, traders and analysts said, and could lead to importers seeking more government-to-government deals to overcome shortages and tame spiraling prices. “Export restrictions inherently reduce trust in the dependability of international trade,” said Shirley Mustafa, rice market analyst at the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). “Thus, they could result in importing countries looking at government-to-government deals to ensure supplies.” While announcing its export ban last week, India has left the door ajar for such deals, saying that it will consider meeting the requirements of countries in need of rice supplies.
India’s government deals
Last September, India banned exports of broken rice in a bid to cool domestic prices, but since then official data shows the country approved sales of around one million metric tons of broken rice to Indonesia, Senegal, Gambia, Mali, and Ethiopia. “The current ban excludes government-to-government sales, and it remains within the government’s prerogative,” said B.V. Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters Association. “A decision will be made based on the needs of importing countries and the supply situation in the local market.” African buyers are likely to approach the Indian government for rice sales, and Asian importers such as Indonesia and the Philippines could sign government-to-government contracts with the re-gion’s top exporters Thailand and Vietnam, traders said. Indonesia has signed an agreement with the Indian government to potentially import one million metric tons of rice if the El Nino weather pattern hits its domestic supplies. India last month approved wheat and broken rice exports to a few countries that had requested shipments of grains. Indonesia’s National Food Agency (NFA) said that deals the coun-try has made since end of last year are sufficient for now, while the National Food Authority in the Philippines can import rice upon approval by the president in an emergency situation. India has ample stocks as of now to meet such requests, while Vietnam is due to start harvesting its main crop, analysts said. “India’s government stocks of non-basmati rice are ample, stand-ing at around 41 million tonnes on July 1,” FAO’s Mustafa said. “So, they could service the needs of both domestic public distribution and government level trades.”