The Centre was planning a series of wheat import tenders over the coming months to build buffer stocks, a senior food ministry official said today. |
The official, who was attending a meeting of the National Development Council on agriculture sector, did not specify any timeframe for floating the tenders. |
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Experts expect the government to float fresh wheat import tenders by June-July as global prices are expected to ease by then on new harvest arrivals in the Black Sea region and Europe. |
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At the beginning of the current financial year, the buffer stood at 4.7 million tonnes compared with 2.1 million tonnes last year. |
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The official's remark comes even as the Centre is finalising purchase details for the 1-million-tonne wheat import tender floated by State Trading Corporation on April 30. |
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The state-run trading house is planning to purchase about 350,000 tonnes of wheat from AC Toepfer and Glencore at $263 a tonne. |
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The food ministry is still assessing the bids and a decision is likely soon. The Centre is not keen to buy the entire 1 million tonnes of wheat as the bids received are too high. The weighted average cost of the bids in the current tender works out around $285 a tonne compared with $230 in the previous tender in September. |
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The country is likely to produce 73.7 million tonnes of wheat in 2007, up from 69.48 million tonnes in 2006. |
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The country grows only one wheat crop a year, mainly in the northern states of Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh and central state of Madhya Pradesh. |
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Sowing starts in the winter months of November and December and harvest begins in late March and early April. |
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