The country's chana output may fall short of the earlier estimates by 10 per cent for the current calender year. |
According to market sources, the drop will be mainly because of decline in acreage and poor rainfall in the major producing regions of the country. |
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Madhya Pradesh, the largest producer of chana, is expected to see a drop of over 20 per cent at less than 2 million tonnes against the average 2.4 million tonnes. Similarly, states such as Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh are likely to produce less crop.
ON A DECLINE Estimated crop in 2008 | State | Production in mn tonnes | Rajasthan | 0.7-0.8 | Madhya Pradesh | 1.9-2.0 | Maharashtra | 0.5-0.6 | Andhra Pradesh | 0.4-0.5 | Karnataka | 0.4-0.5 | Uttar Pradesh | 0.2-0.3 | Others | 0.2-0.3 | Market sources | |
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Suresh Agarwal, chairman of Madhya Pradesh Dal Udyog Mahasangh, said, "The crop this year is expected to be around 5 million tonnes instead of the earlier estimates of 5.5-5.6 million tonnes." Last year, the country had produced close to 6 million tonnes. |
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Refuting the reports that output may drop to 4.5 million tonnes, commodity analysts from Angel Commodities said that output would be lower but not that low. |
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The Indian Institute of Pulses Research had earlier predicted a 15-20 per cent drop in chana acreage. Marketmen said that if it rained in Rajasthan, crop could see some improvement. The country is expected to have a carry-forward stocks of less than 400,000 tonnes. |
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Arrivals from Karnataka, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh have already begun. Next week, it will pick up momentum. Crop from Madhya Pradesh will start arriving within a fortnight, while harvesting in Rajasthan will begin in March. |
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The country consumes around 6 million tonnes of chana annually. It imports the commodity from Australia and Tanzania. The import costs from the two countries are in the range of Rs 2,350-2,400 a quintal. |
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Agarwal said once the crop arrived in full swing, the market would see a correction. The decline would be around Rs 100 a quintal, he added. |
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On the National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange, the near month futures of chana has scale up to Rs 2,300 a quintal from Rs 2,150 a quintal a fortnight ago. |
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