An interaction with the Mandi traders in different major cities like Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Lucknow, Kolkata, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad indicate that the tomato prices may not immediately ease as flooding in some of the growing states has led to damage to the crop. Unlike onion and potato, the shelf life for tomato is very short and it needs cold chains and modern warehouses for storage and transportation.
On the back of rising demand, the grocers have increased stock of tomato puree/ketchup, as the home makers are quite sensitive to any price rise. Most of the Indian curries, both for vegetarians and non-vegetarians need large quantity of tomatoes; besides, the raw material cost of dishes in hotels and restaurants has also gone up, the paper.
"Frequent volatility in prices of fruits and vegetables underscores need for creation of a well-equipped supply chain in this segment. Both the states and the Centre should extend liberal sops for investment in cold chains and referigerated infrastructure", said ASSOCHAM Secretary General Mr D S Rawat.
Majority of respondents said that they have curtailed the use of tomatoes and prefer dishes which do not require much use of tomatoes, like lady finger or pumpkin and some are substituting it with raw mango to get that sour taste, adds the paper.
As per reports, lack of rains in the tomato-growing areas of Maharashtra and other states have a big impact on arrivals of tomatoes in the mandis, adds the paper. The maximum impact was felt in Delhi-NCR followed by Mumbai.
The prices of tomatoes are likely to increase further during coming months, if adequate safeguards are not taken while tomato prices are already touching Rs 100 per kg.
Powered by Capital Market - Live News
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content