Business Standard

Coffee exports fall 5.3% on low demand from US, EU

Continued global economic slowdown, drop in demand from major consuming countries in the European Union impacted export

Mahesh Kulkarni Bangalore
India's coffee exports fell 5.34 per cent to 2,99,266 tonnes in the year ended September 30, as demand from the US and the European Union (EU) remained subdued. In the previous coffee year (October 2011 to September 2012), India had exported 3,16,164 tonnes.

“The decline in exports was mainly due to weak demand from European nations such as Italy, Spain, Greece and Portugal, as buyers were looking for cheaper coffees,” exporters said. Realisation from exports declined 1.3 per cent to Rs 1,51,379 a tonne between October 2012 and September 26, 2013, against Rs 1,49,459 a tonne in the previous coffee year. In value terms, total coffee exports fell 4.1 per cent to Rs 3,530 crore, against Rs 4,725 crore in the previous year, according to the Coffee Board.

A sharp drop in the prices of the arabica variety last financial year contributed to the decline in exports, as a large number of farmers withdrew sales, exporters said. Arabica prices declined 20-25 per cent.

“Arabica coffee prices ended within a cent of a more than a four-year low on Thursday, as big supplies of the beans and tepid demand encouraged selling. Prices were down about 20 per cent for the year; roasters appear to be waiting for even lower prices due to large supplies, particularly from Brazil. LIFFE robusta coffee futures hit an almost three-year low last Thursday, as expectations of a large crop from top grower Vietnam weigh on prices. LIFFE robusta coffee futures for November delivery settled $43 lower at $1,663 a tonne,” the Coffee Board said. India primarily exports coffee to Italy, Germany, Russia, Belgium and Spain.

The outlook for exports in 2013-14 isn't very promising. The Coffee Board has said in 2013-14, production would be at least 10 per cent lower than post-blossom estimates. In its post-blossom estimates earlier this year, it said production would stand at 3,47,000 tonnes. In 2012-13, production stood at 3,18,200 tonnes.

  “Based on the conditions in February and March, when the growing regions received good blossom showers, we had estimated we would record 3,47,000 tonnes. However, due to a drought in the two subsequent months and the heavy rains in June, July and August, we anticipate a drop of about 10 per cent against the post-blossom estimates,” Coffee Board Chairman Jawaid Akhtar had told Business Standard earlier this month.

This means for 2013-14, India's bean production could be about 3,12,000 tonnes. However, growers estimate it at 70,000-2,90,000 tonnes. Exporters said low production would hit exports in the next crop year, too.
 

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First Published: Sep 30 2013 | 10:35 PM IST

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