Despite the ban India is open to exporting wheat to

Despite the ban, India is open to exporting wheat to countries in need

India says it will keep a window open to export wheat to food-deficit countries despite a government-level export ban announced on Friday

From ASHOK SHARMA Associated Press

May 16, 2022 12:38 am

• 2 minutes reading time

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India’s Trade Minister BVR Subrahmanyam told reporters the government will also allow private companies to meet earlier commitments to export nearly 4.3 million tons of wheat by July. India exported 1 million tons of wheat in April.

India mainly exports wheat to neighboring countries such as Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka.

A statement in the Government Gazette of the Directorate of Foreign Trade on Friday said a rise in global wheat prices is threatening the food security of India and neighboring and vulnerable countries.

A key goal of export restrictions is to curb rising domestic prices. Global wheat prices are up more than 40% year-to-date.

At the same time, India’s own wheat crop has suffered from a record-breaking heatwave that is hampering production.

He said India’s wheat production fell by three million tons this year from 106 million tons last year. Wheat prices have skyrocketed by 20-40% in India.

“The current price spike appears to be more of a panic reaction than a response based on a real collapse in supply or a sudden surge in demand,” Subrahmanyam said.

Despite being the second largest wheat producer in the world, India consumes most of the wheat produced. It had set itself the goal of exporting 10 million tons of grain in 2022-23 to capitalize on the war’s global disruptions to wheat supplies and to find new markets for its wheat in Europe, Africa and Asia.

Up to 90 million tons of wheat was consumed in India last year out of a total production of 109 million tons, Subrahmanyam said, adding that India exported 7 million tons of wheat last year.