The government plans to increase purchases from farmers to build stockpiles and lower imports. |
The government may buy as much as 15 million tonnes, up 35 per cent from a year earlier, said T Nanda Kumar, federal food secretary, in an interview in Dubai on Tuesday. |
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Higher purchases would reduce the need to buy wheat overseas at prices that have almost doubled in the past year, reaching a record $10.095 a bushel on December 17. |
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It may also take pressure off global supplies, which the US government forecasts will drop to 110.9 million tonnes by May 31, the lowest in three decades. |
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"If we procure this much, we may be comfortable,'' he said. |
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India's wheat production may match last year's 74.9 million tonnes in the March-April harvest because of favourable weather and increased planting in Punjab and Haryana, the biggest producing states, Nanda Kumar said. |
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The government may still import wheat to boost its reserves, Nanda Kumar said. |
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India has since July imported 1.64 million tonnes to build stockpiles. Purchases in the year ending June may drop to 2 million tonnes, less than a third of the previous year, US Department of Agriculture said in report on January 11. |
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"We may not need to but importing is an option that will be kept open,'' he said. |
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The government needs 1 million tonnes a month to distribute to the poor. Stockpiles at state warehouses may total 5 million tonnes by April 1, more than the 4 million tonnes needed for emergencies, because of recent imports, Nanda Kumar said. |
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Wheat for March delivery gained as much as 1.1 per cent to $9.84 a bushel in after-hours electronic trading on the Chicago Board of Trade. It traded at $9.77 at 4 pm Singapore time. |
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