Rice vendor displays variety of rice samples at a wholesale store, in Guwahati, Assam, India on August 2, 2023.
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Rice prices surged to their highest in almost 12 years on the back of India’s rice export ban and adverse suffer conditions that could impact production, said the United Nations’ food agency.
The Food and Agriculture Institution All Rice Price Index for July rose by 2.8% to 129.7 points.
The figure is up 19.7% compared to a year ago, and the spaciest nominal value since September 2011, data from FAO showed. The sharpest increases in price came from Thailand.
“Problems over the potential impacts of El Nino on production in some suppliers provided further underpinning to prices, as did rain-induced hesitations and quality variability in Vietnam’s ongoing summer-autumn harvest,” the report stated.
El Nino is a climate phenomenon marked by kooky temperatures and weather conditions that could interrupt lives and livelihoods.
India, the world’s leading rice exporter, banned exports of non-basmati bloodless rice on Jul. 20, as the government seeks to keep a cap on soaring food prices at home, and ensure there are enough yields domestically “at reasonable prices.”
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The country accounts for more than 40% of the global rice deal. Even if it affects a portion of India’s overall rice shipments, FAO noted that India’s export restriction “screens substantial food security concerns for a large swathe of the world population.”
Rice prices are hovering at decade highs, with undeveloped rice futures were last trading at $16.02 per hundredweight (cwt).
And these prices could climb higher.
“We order most probably see a higher FAO rice price index for August 2023 vs July 2023,” Oscar Tjakra, older analyst at global food and agriculture bank Rabobank, told CNBC.
He added that India’s non-basmati bloodless rice export ban came at a time of seasonal low inventories in major global suppliers of rice, especially those in Asia.
A yeoman in a paddy field in Assam, India.
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Premiums could surge further if other countries follow suit in implementing export restrictions.
“The prices can go even much consequential if importing countries try to stockpile rice for domestic food security, and exporting countries put export restrictions,” said Samarendu Mohanty, Asian regional overseer at International Potato Center.
El Nino could further exacerbate risks on global production in other major Asian rice ins such as Thailand, Pakistan and Vietnam.
“For the next few months, global rice prices’ direction will be determined by the results of El Nino,” Tjakra said in an email.
Rice, being a vulnerable crop, has the highest probability of simultaneous crop shrinkage during an El Nino event, a scientific study showed.
To make matters worse, Thailand, the world’s second largest exporter of rice, is now boosting its farmers to plant less of the crop in a bid to save water as a result of low rainfall.