SINGAPORE: Adverse weather across top rice suppliers in Asia, including the biggest exporter India, is threatening to reduce the output of the world’s most important food staple and stoke food inflation that is already near record highs.
Rice has bucked the trend of rising food prices amid bumper crops and large inventories at exporters over the past two years, even as Covid-19, supply disruptions and more recently the Russia-Ukraine conflict made other grains costlier.
But inclement weather in exporting countries in Asia, which accounts for about 90 per cent of the world’s rice output, is likely to change the price trajectory, traders and analysts said.
“There is an upside potential for rice prices with the possibility of production downgrades in key exporting countries,” said Phin Ziebell, agribusiness economist at National Australia Bank.
“An increase in rice prices would add to already major challenges for food affordability in parts of the developing world,” Ziebell told Reuters.
Patchy rains in India’s grain belt, a heatwave in China, floods in Bangladesh and quality downgrades in Vietnam could curb yields in four of the world’s top five rice producers, farmers, traders and analysts told Reuters.
“Rice has remained accessible even as overall food prices reached record levels earlier this year,” said U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organisation economist, Shirley Mustafa.
“We are now witnessing weather-related setbacks in some key rice producing countries, including India, China and Bangladesh, which could result in lower output if conditions don’t improve in the next few weeks,” Mustafa added.
‘Production drop is certain’
India’s top rice producing states of Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh have recorded a monsoon rainfall deficit of as much as 45pc so far this season, data from the state-run weather department shows.
That has in part led to a 13pc drop in rice planting this year, which could result in production falling by 10 million tonnes or around 8% from last year, said B.V. Krishna Rao, president of the All India Rice Exporters Association.
The area under rice cultivation is down also because some farmers shifted to pulses and oilseeds, Rao said.
India’s summer-sown rice accounts for more than 85pc of its annual production, which jumped to a record 129.66 million tonnes in the crop year to June 2022.
“A production drop is certain, but the big question is how the government will react,” a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm said.
Milled and paddy rice stocks in India as of July 1 totalled 55 million tonnes, versus the target of 13.54 million tonnes.
That has kept rice prices down in the past year together with India’s record 21.5 million tonnes shipment in 2021, which was more than the total shipped by the world’s next four biggest exporters - Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan and the United States.
“But the government is hypersensitive about prices. A small rise could prompt it to impose export curbs,” the trader said.
In Vietnam, rains during harvest have damaged grain quality.
“Never before have I seen it rain that much during harvest. It’s just abnormal,” said Tran Cong Dang, a 50-year-old farmer based in the Mekong Delta province of Bac Lieu.
“In just ten days, the total measured rain is somewhat equal to the whole of previous month,” said Dang, who estimated a 70pc output loss on his 2-hectare paddy field due to floods.
Published in Dawn, August 6th, 2022
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