India lifts ban on onion export

India lifts ban on onion export

India withdrew its ban on onion export on Monday, nearly three and a half months after imposing it abruptly, which sent the commodity’s price through the roof in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh will resume onion import through Dinajpur’s Hili land port on January 1 next, officials there said.

The decision was announced through a notification from India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry.

Businessmen at the Hili port had confirmed the development.

Onion prices jumped sharply in Bangladesh after India banned export of the popular kitchen item on September 14 in the pretext of local shortage and price hike.

The abrupt move pushed up onion prices in the Bangladesh market, forcing the country to import the item from various other suppliers to meet the demand.

Mobarak Hossain, an onion importer at Hili, said that they received a letter from Indian traders at about 10:00pm on the export ban withdrawal.

‘They’re allowing onion export from Jan 1 but since it’s a weekly holiday, the import will begin from Jan 2,’ he said, adding that they were preparing to open LCs.

But since no price had been fixed, it was assumed that the onion will have to be imported within $300.

‘The prices will fall to Tk 20-25 per kg in the retail market once the imported onion hits the market,’ Mobarak said.

Meanwhile, Hili port importer-exporter group president Harun ur Rashid said that they would decide on onion import after meeting Indian traders.

‘We had opened LCs for 10,000 metric tonnes before the export ban. We incurred heavy losses as India didn’t allow us to import onion despite repeated requests,’ he said.

‘Local farmers are cultivating onion in large scale now. We have to make sure that they don’t incur losses,’ Rashid said.

India exported $198 million of onions in the April-June period of FY21 and $440 million in 2019-20.

The prices shot up to Tk 100-120 a kg after India had banned onion export on September 14 this year for the second consecutive year.

Bangladesh’s annual demand for the kitchen item ranges between 2.2 and 2.5 million tonnes. Commerce ministry figures show the amount imported was hardly 0.4 million tonnes in FY09, but had touched up to 1.1 million tonnes in recent years.

The government took prompt steps to import the kitchen staple to cool down the market and sell it through its trading arm Trading Corporation of Bangladesh.

The prices had been falling for the past few weeks with the TCB offering the item at Tk 23 per kg through e-commerce companies.

On Sept 16, commerce minister Tipu Munshi told the media that the country had a stock of 600,000 tonnes of onion and asked the people not to panic.

Onion prices in Bangladesh saw a 557.8 per cent year-on-year rise last year after India first banned the item’s export, according to TCB data.

mj/