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India to spend $1.5bn to help farmers grow palm oil trees


Employees fill plastic bottles with edible oil at a refinery in Gujarat. India’s annual edible oil imports have risen 12 times to 14.4mn tonnes per year, sources said yesterday.


Reuters/New Delhi



India plans to spend $1.5bn in the next three years to help farmers grow oil palm trees in an area the size of New Jersey, government sources said, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi pushing to make the nation self-sufficient in edible oils this decade.
Modi is targeting India’s $10bn import bill for edible oils, its third-highest overseas spend after oil and gold, and has already been considering buying oilseeds directly from farmers and boosting government support for growing rapeseed, soybeans and peanuts.
A successful Indian push into palm cultivation would drag on international markets for the commodity, hitting Indonesia and Malaysia as they are currently the only major growers of the crop.
“We’ve identified nine states with suitable climatic conditions but we were apprehensive that the long gestation period would dissuade farmers from adopting the crop,” said one of the sources involved in the planning. He declined to be named as he was not authorised to speak with media.
“That’s why we’ve decided to earmark Rs100,000mn rupees ($1.53bn) that will largely be spent on supporting the farmers.”
Palm, the highest-yielding perennial edible oil crop, needs a fraction of the area used to grow other oilseeds, potentially attractive in a country like India where land is increasingly scarce as the population rockets.
But a gestation period of up to five years and laws limiting the size of each palm development have stymied previous efforts to switch to the crop, putting off local farmers as well as companies such as Ruchi Soya, Cargill and Bunge.
However, the government hopes that its $1.5bn backing will make the difference, with sources saying that direct support from Modi will also be key.
“It’s a pity that we couldn’t meet our earlier targets,” said the first source. “But the fact that the prime minister is giving a lot of impetus due to unbridled edible oil imports, we’re trying our best to make it happen this time.”
The government is mostly targeting fallow farmland in coastal states such as Maharashtra and Karnataka to grow palm on 2mn hectares, which could produce 8mn tonnes of oil annually once the crop bears fruit in about five years, another government source said. Food ministry spokesman NC Joshi declined to comment. Indian consumption of vegetable oils has trebled over the last 20 years as the population grows and incomes rise, while output has increased by less than a third. That has forced it to become the world’s biggest importer of edible oils, with palm oil accounting for 80% of that.
Annual edible oil imports have risen 12 times to 14.4mn tonnes per year, with the product used to make everything from bhajis and biryanis to potato chips and noodles.
Togar Sitanggang, secretary general of the Indonesian Palm Oil Association, told Reuters that India’s plan would increase pressure on the Southeast Asian nation to use more biodiesel, made with palm, at home. The Malaysian Palm Oil Board declined to make immediate comment.
Since India’s first major attempt to cultivate palm more than two decades ago, the area devoted to the crop has risen to about 200,000 hectares from around 8,600 hectares.
The country last tried to boost palm cultivation in 2010-11 by setting a target to produce 4mn tonnes of oil in five years. Output has not risen above 70 tonnes a year. Some industry officials were sceptical the latest push would work without changes to the law.
“The bizarre rule that subjects (growers) to the land ceiling laws that don’t allow commercial cultivation of oil palm by private companies is the crux of the problem,” said BV Mehta, executive director of industry body the Solvent Extractors’ Association of India.
Unlike tea, coffee and rubber, India still does not recognise oil palm as a plantation crop, prohibiting large-scale cultivation by individual companies that would make economic sense. One of the reasons for limiting palm coverage is the fear that Corps would take over large tracts of land at the cost of other crops, the government sources said.


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