Indian farmers are likely to expand soyabean planting areas by nearly 15 percent after the government raised edible oil import tax to the highest level in more than a decade, lifting domestic oilseed prices to nearly two-year highs, a trade body said.
Higher production of the main summer-sown oilseed could help India, the world's biggest vegetable oil importer, trim costly imports from Brazil, Argentina, Indonesia and Malaysia. It could also mean a boost in exports of soyameal, a key animal feed, to Asian buyers such as Japan, Vietnam and Bangladesh.
"Soyabean has been giving farmers good returns," Atul Chaturvedi, president of industry body Solvent Extractors Association of India, told Reuters in an interview.
"Due to the duty hike, soyabean prices are...significantly above the (government-fixed) minimum support price," Chaturvedi said. "The planting area could rise by 15 percent this year." Indian soyameal once accounted for nearly a quarter of all Southeast Asian imports, but the country's share has been falling due to rising domestic soyabean consumption amid stagnant production.
To support local oilseed farmers and curb rising imports of edible oils, India has raised import duty on palm oil, soyaoil and other cooking oils to the highest level in over a decade.
After the hike, local soyabean prices jumped to 3,895 rupees ($58.31) per 100 kg earlier this month, the highest level in nearly two years. The government-fixed support price for soyabean was 3,050 rupees.
Soyabeans were cultivated on 10.6 million hectares in 2017, down 8 percent from a year ago, data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare showed.
Farmers in central India have been getting poor returns from pulses and this will prompt some of them to switch to soyabean, said Sandeep Bajoria, chief executive of the Sunvin Group, a Mumbai-based vegetable oil importer.
Prices of summer-sown pulses like red gram have been trading below the government set price due to higher supplies, he said.
Most Indian farmers begin cultivating soyabean, cotton and pulses, which are rain-fed crops, in June after the arrival of the monsoon rains.
Western state of Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh in central India account for more than 80 percent of the country's total soyabean output. In 2017 a severe outbreak of pink bollworms trimmed returns of farmers like Sudhakar Mondhe from cotton due to higher spending on pesticides.
"Last year I incurred losses in cotton planting. This year I am planning to reduce cotton area and increase soyabean sowing," said Mondhe, a farmer from Yavatmal in Maharashtra.
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