India rice exports seen surging to record as Bangladesh boosts buying

Reuters  |  MUMBAI/DHAKA 

By Rajendra and Ruma Paul

MUMBAI/DHAKA (Reuters) - India's likely jumped 22 percent in 2017 to a record 12.3 million tonnes as neighbouring ramped up purchases after flooding hit its crops, industry officials told

The boost in shipments from the world's top exporter of the grain is set to extend into 2018 as and continue to buy aggressively amid depleting inventories in No.2 exporter Thailand, the officials said.

"was actively buying throughout 2017. It offset the impact of slightly weaker demand from African countries," said M. Adishankar, at Sri Lalitha, a leading exporter located in the southern Indian state of

Bangladesh's purchases likely lifted India's non-basmati by 38 percent in 2017 to 8.4 million tonnes and total to 12.3 million tonnes, the officials and exporters said.

That would surpass 2014's record of 11.5 million tonnes.

They based the 2017 export figures on their estimates for December shipments plus previously issued government data for January to November. Government numbers for December are expected to be released around the start of next month.

non-basmati mainly to African and Asian countries and premium basmati to the Middle East, the and Britain.

Traditionally the world's fourth-biggest producer, emerged as a major importer of the grain in 2017 after floods damaged crops and pushed domestic prices to record highs.

sourced more than 80 percent of its 2017 imports of 2.4 million tonnes from India, said Badrul Hasan, of Bangladesh's state grains buyer.

The South Asian nation's overseas purchases are likely to remain robust until supply rises after its summer crop, also known as Boro, in May, Hasan said.

contributes more than half Bangladesh's typical annual output of around 35 million tonnes.

Last year reduced import taxes on to boost private buying. It also bought from in state-to-state deals to quickly raise supplies and try to rein in prices. [nL3N1O63Y6]

But prices stayed high in despite the largest imports in nearly two decades, which will encourage farmers to expand the amount of land used to cultivate the staple crop, Hasan said.

NON-BASMATI

India's in 2018 depend largely on non-basmati shipments as basmati are likely to remain more-or-less steady at around 4 million tonnes, said Vijay Setia, of the All Exporters' Association.

"Non-basmati depend on stock positions in importing countries like and Sri Lanka," Setia said.

African nations stepped up buying from last year, but that could ease in 2018 as state stockpiles are depleted in the Southeast Asian country, potentially boosting appetite for Indian supply, said a with a global trading firm.

"For key markets like and Sri Lanka, has freight advantage over This will help even in 2018," the said.

(Reporting by Rajendra in and in Dhaka; Editing by Joseph Radford)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, January 10 2018. 14:00 IST