Hindustan Times (Noida)

Red Sea strikes alarm basmati rice exporters

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Middle East conflict has alarmed shippers of basmati rice, India’s top agricultur­al export commodity, after two cargo vessels with Indian crew were struck by drones in the Red Sea by suspected Houthi rebels. Some suppliers said an escalation of attacks could force them to change route.

Following the emerging risks, officials from the commerce ministry last week apprised a delegation of basmati exporters of the situation arising out of attacks by Iran-leaning Houthi rebels of Yemen on ships in the Red Sea that could impact trade. Houthis have pledged support for Hamas in Gaza.

The Red Sea route is a busy corridor for the bulk of India’s sea trade to Africa, the Middle East and the European Union. “India is monitoring the situation and any heightened risks will be flagged to all stakeholde­rs. Alternate routes could be utilised,” an official said, requesting anonymity.

The geopolitic­al risks come amid a robust surge in shipments of freshly harvested Indian basmati rice due to higher demand from Middle Eastern buyers this season, which has raised prices for farmers by up to 15%.

Brisk exports of the aromatic long grain have been helped by India’s lowering of the minimum export price from $1,200 a tonne to $950 a tonne last month. Nonavailab­ility of most other long grain white rice varieties due to a ban on export by India has also stoked demand for basmati.

Better volumes of basmati export could help narrow India’s agricultur­al trade gap this year because the country has banned shipments of white rice, wheat and onion to cool domestic prices. Consumer inflation rose to 5.55% in November, driven by food prices, snapping a threemonth declining trend. The country exported nearly $3.38 billion worth of basmati till November 15.

“The trade situation is normal barring a few incidents and commerce is happening normally. But we foresee trade risks if hostilitie­s escalate,” another official said, requesting not to be identified.

Exporters could be forced to switch to new routes, which could raise shipments costs, depending on how much longer the supply lines are and how higher insurance costs, said Kedar Kohli of ORM Overseas, a basmati trader. India exports over 4 million tonnes of basmati. Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and the US are among the top buyers.

 ?? HT ?? India exported nearly $3.38 billion worth of basmati till November 15.
HT India exported nearly $3.38 billion worth of basmati till November 15.

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