India’s Vegetable Oil Imports May Rise, Mistry Says
By Thomas Kutty Abraham
April 29 (Bloomberg) —
The nation will import as much as 6.5 million metric tons of vegetable oils in the year to October compared with 5.6 million tons a year earlier, Mistry said in a phone interview from
More demand from
“The availability of cheap imported oils in
India, which buys almost half the vegetable oil it needs from overseas, scrapped the import duty on crude soybean and palm oil, and lowered the levy on refined edible oil to 7.5 percent on March 31 to curb inflation that has risen to the highest in more than three years.
The government has asked state-run companies that have begun importing edible oils to sell to the poor at subsidized rates to cool prices.
Increasing Imports
The South Asian nation imported 421,686 tons of soybean oil and palm oil in March, 33 percent more than the 317,930 tons a year earlier, according to the Solvent Extractors Association, a Mumbai-based processors group. Vegetable oil imports in the first five months of the year beginning November jumped 38 percent to 2.26 million tons.
The nation imports palm oil, typically used as cooking oil or in soaps, from
Palm oil for July delivery on the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange, the benchmark for the commodity, fell as much as 3.2 percent today to 3,399 ringgit a ton.
Mistry expects palm oil prices to reach a record 4,500 ringgit a ton between September and March as the peak production season in
“You might see palm oil moving a little sideways in the next couple of weeks and as the high production cycle ends prices could move up,” Mistry said. “Weather during the growth of soybeans in July and August in the













