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Crops in India in Dire Need of Rain as El Niño Hurts Monsoon

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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Crops in India in Dire Need of Rain as El Niño Hurts Monsoon

Rice, soybean and corn crops in India urgently need rainfall as the strongest El Niño in almost two- decades parches vast tracts of farm land.

Parts of the southern, central and western regions are facing moisture stress and need widespread rains in the next two weeks to salvage crops, according to J.S. Sandhu, a deputy director general at the state-run Indian Council of Agricultural Research in New Delhi. That may prove elusive as the monsoon begins to retreat from the north of the country this week, according to the state forecaster.

El Niño is changing weather across the globe, baking parts of Asia and bringing torrential rains to parts of South America. That may disrupt harvests and supply of rice from the Philippines to India. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is counting on a bumper harvest to curb retail inflation and pave the way for the fourth interest rate cut this year to accelerate economic growth.

“Domestic food inflation overall will rise as there will be upward pressure on food prices because of lower rainfall,” Faiyaz Hudani, associate vice president at Kotak Commodity Services, said from Mumbai on 2 September. “The only thing that’s good for India now is the declining global prices of commodities, especially edible oils and the whole oilseeds complex.”

India is poised to import record amounts of palm oil after prices in Kuala Lumpur plunged to a six-year low last month and as a domestic cooking oil shortage widens. Food costs tracked by the United Nations fell for a ninth month in July, the longest slump in more than a decade.

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“There’s an overall rainfall deficit in the oilseed growing belt and that will definitely have an impact on the yields,” said B.V. Mehta, executive director of Solvent Extractors’ Association of India. “There will be increase in imports. Fortunately for India, international prices are low.”

Monsoon rainfall, which waters more than half India’s 145 million hectares (360 million acres) of crop land, was below the 50-year average in July and August, and September will be not be any better, according to the India Meteorological Department. Downpour since the start of monsoon on 1 June are 12 per cent below the average, department data show.

Bloomberg News, edited by ESM

 

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