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Granaries full, Centre cuts export duty on parboiled rice by half

The move is to ease the mounting pressure on rice storage capacity; granaries expect fresh arrivals as kharif crop procurement begins in a week.

By Dhanam News Desk
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Facing storage challenges with granaries filled from last year’s paddy stock and the new crop procurement set to begin on 1 October, the central government has reduced the export duty on parboiled rice to 10% from 20%. The move is aimed at easing the storage burden and boosting India’s rice exports in the global markets.

A notification from the Department of Revenue, under the Finance Ministry, said the revised duty structure will take effect immediately.

The government has also slashed the export duty on husked (brown) rice and rice in husk (paddy or rough) to 10%.

The decision is seen as a response to mounting pressure on storage capacity, which has been strained with last year’s stock still occupying granaries just ahead of fresh arrivals.

The decision marks a reversal of the policy imposed in August 2023, when the government raised the duty to 20% following a poor monsoon due to El Niño, which left key paddy-growing areas rain-deficient.

At the time, the government aimed to ensure domestic availability amid concerns over crop yields. The poor rains had impacted paddy-growing regions, leading to concerns over the domestic rice supply and pushing the government to restrict exports to secure enough for domestic consumption.

Granaries overflowing 

However, with granaries now overflowing and the new crop about to arrive, the export duty cut seeks to facilitate better stock management and allow exporters to clear inventory.

Haryana and Punjab, two of India’s major rice-producing states, have announced their paddy procurement policies, with Haryana starting procurement from Friday.

Agriculture Ministry data shows acreage under kharif crops has risen 1.50% year-on-year to 11 crore hectares as of 20 September, surpassing the four-year average of 10.9 crore hectares.

Kharif crops, such as paddy, pulses, oilseeds, sugarcane and cotton, had been sown across 10.88 crore hectares a year ago.

As per the consumer affairs ministry, the price of rice saw a 2.2% increase from ₹42.42 per kg to ₹43.35 per kg in a year on September 25.

76 lakh tonnes of parboiled rice exported

In 2023-24, India exported 1.57 crore tonnes of rice, including 23 lakh tonnes of non-basmati white rice, 5.45 lakh tonnes of broken rice and 75.7 lakh tonnes of parboiled rice, against 21 lakh tonnes in 2022-23.

The prohibition on non-basmati white rice was announced last July to safeguard domestic food security and protect consumers from price shocks while allowing farmers decent prices amid El Niño disrupting rainfall that resulted in lower crop output. Additionally, the government hasd imposed a 20% export duty on parboiled rice.

(By arrangement with livemint.com)