New sugar season to begin with much lower stocks: Pawar

New Delhi, Sep. 1 (ANI): Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar on Tuesday said that the new sugar season will begin with much lower stocks, as the production will be hit by lower sugar recovery from cane after the failure of monsoon rains.

“The production of sugar in India during year 2008 and 2009 sugar season has not been adequate to meet the domestic demand of the country. We started with very comfortable opening balance that was around 10 million tonnes of sugar on 1st October 2008. However we expect sugar production during 2009 and 2010 definitely less…somewhat 8-22 billion tonnes,” Pawar told reporters.

Recently, the head of the National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories Ltd, J.B. Patel had said India’s opening stocks would be at 2.7 million tonnes, down three quarters from 10 million tonnes on October 1, 2008.

India’s dwindling stocks and rising demand have helped raw sugar futures surge to the highest in nearly three decades on prospects of large purchases by the world’s top sugar consumer.

Weak monsoon rains have further raised supply concerns in India.

Many Indian farmers abandoned cane cultivation last year as they found wheat more attractive after the government raised the purchase price for the grain handsomely.

India had exported five million tonnes of sugar last year, but it swiftly turned into a large importer to counter low supply and rising prices.

Sugar industry officials say the government should lift controls on the sugar sector to correct the demand-supply mismatch. (ANI)

Indian farmers along Pakistan border in Punjab resent restriction

Amritsar, Aug 28 (ANI): Anguished Indian villagers in Punjab, whose farms lie across the fencing along the Pakistan border have staged a protest over problems faced in tilling their fields.

The protest was staged under the banner of the Jamhuri Kisan Sabha (Democratic Farmers Council) and the Border Area Sangharsh (Struggle) Committee.

Hundreds of agitating farmers gathered in Bhindi Saiydan village of Amritsar on Thursday, saying that the Border Security Force has enforced stiff restrictions, giving them little access to till their land and tend the crops.

“We are facing a lot of difficulties. The gate opens at 9 in the morning and around 1 to 2 pm in the afternoon, they ask us to go back. If any farmer has work left, they even ask those farmers to leave,” said Balbir Singh, a farmer.

“We also demand that close relatives of these border farmers be given employment opportunities,” said Satnam Singh Ajnala, president of Jamhuri Kisan Sabha.

Amritsar and Tarn Taran districts alone have about 170-kilometre long border with Pakistan.

India began setting up a long fence along the disputed border with Pakistan in the mid-90s to stop militant groups and illegal immigrants from sneaking into Indian territory.

Pakistan initially objected to the fence, but India hurriedly set it up at least 2-4 km away from the border line in some places, saying they were coming under heavy firing from across the border.

As a result, vast areas of fertile land in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, were left outside the fence, leading to protests from Indian farmers. (ANI)

India calls on Tesco to reform farming industry

Mumbai, May 19 (ANI): British retailing giant Tesco may be called in to help India modernise its farming industry in the wake of the Congress Party victory in the country’s general election. ccording to The Telegraph, Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi has suggested that the expertise of Western retailers in modern sourcing and storage systems must be introduced to aid Indian farmers.

A Tesco spokesman expressed its interest in working with the project.

“We would strongly welcome any steps by the government to improve infrastructure and create a solid, good quality supply chain,” the paper quoted a Tesco spokesperson, as saying.

“We are already helping to educate farmers in terms of food safety and hygiene, but better roads and refrigeration techniques will increase choice of products, hygiene and freshness and also elp the export market. We are still learning a lot about India and the market, but we are hoping to expand and will launch our first cash and carry outlet in the (Mumbai) area next year,” he dded. (ANI)

Lower prices may drag India’s rubber acreage

A sharp fall in domestic natural rubber prices is seen dashing hopes of new plantation, which may create scarcity and push up prices in coming years, farmers and officials say.

The most traded RSS-4 (ribbed smoked sheet) prices have fallen by 47 percent to 75 rupees per kg, since hitting an all-time high of 142 rupees on Aug. 28.

“There is an expected 20-30 percent fall this fiscal in the area under new plantation as farmers will turn away on poor returns,” Rubber Board chairman Sajen Peter told Reuters.

In 2007-08, total area under rubber plantation was 635,000 hectares and area under new plantation was 20,000 hectares.

“There will also be some effect on new plantations in the north east because of the price slump,” said J.K.Thomas, rubber committee member, United Planters Association of Southern India (UPASI). Re-plantations are also likely to take a hit.

In 2008/09, Indian farmers re-planted the crop on 8,500 hectares, but in 2009/10 that is bound to dip, Peter added.

“Five percent of the total acreage gets replanted every year and out of that about 1 percent will get affected as planters will either switch or just simply stop tapping and not go in at all for replantation,” UPASI’s Thomas said.

Low returns on rubber timber, a key income generator after the plant is cut, is also detrimental, industry players said.

The rubber plant generally takes seven years to be ready for tapping and has a life span of about 30 years, after which the yield starts reducing, making re-plantation necessary.

“Labour charges, cost of seedlings and cost of fertilisers shot up when rubber prices rose. And these are still the same or only marginally lower,” said Martin Kadakkuzha, a farmer in Kannur in Kerala, which accounts for 90 percent of the output.

In 2008, prices of many agri-commodities rallied, boosting demand for agriculture labourers and pushing up daily wages.

Labour issues may force a shift to coconut and cocoa, Thomas said. The situation may worsen as the industry sees a further dip in prices due to the economic slowdown, he said.

“Natural rubber prices are not expected to make much headway in the near future in the domestic and international markets… Prices are expected to fall to 65 rupees (per kg) in the first six months of FY10,” Peter added.

LONG-TERM IMPACT

Lower pace of new plantation and re-plantation will not have an impact in short term since major consumers, like tyre makers, are cutting output, but prices may firm up in the long term.

India is the world’s fourth largest rubber producer and consumer. Tyre makers consume about 60 percent of total output.

“In the short-term, prices may remain depressed mainly on lower demand, but demand has to increase with a revival in global economy. We may see a rise in demand from mid-2010,” Anand James, senior analyst at Geojit Comtrade Ltd, said.

Some industry officials said despite a sharp fall in prices, rubber is still the best choice for farmers in Kerala.

Prices in Indian markets are higher than international market and farmers are still making profits, M.F. Vohra, president of All India Rubber Industries Association said.