India's oilseed output rose 2.2 percent to 26.01 million tonnes in the current crop year, a leading trade body said on Sunday, with the main winter-sown rapeseed crop hit by adverse weather conditions, and suggesting edible oil imports might rise. Output of rapeseed dropped by 12.6 percent to 6.03 million tonnes in the year to June 2012, said the Central Organisation for Oil Industry and Trade, which usually gives its estimate for the full year in mid-March after the crop has been harvested.
The forecasts for both oilseed and rapeseed output are below farm ministry expectations but ahead of traders' forecasts for a 25 percent fall in rapeseed output made in February. Traders then also suggested lower output could mean a rise of about half a million tonnes in imported oils for the year ending October 31. The farm ministry last month pegged India's total oilseeds output at 30.5 million tonnes in 2011/12, down six percent. Rapeseed output was pegged at 7.5 million tonnes. Rapeseed, the main winter-sown oilseed crop, was hit by higher temperatures at the planting and in the final stages as well, traders said. India, the world's top vegetable oil importer, grows nine oilseeds, with soyabean being the main summer-sown crop. Rapeseed oil meets 15-17 percent of about 16.5 million tonnes of annual edible oil demand.
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