Onion | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Tue, 01 Oct 2019 09:48:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Onion | SabrangIndia 32 32 Farmers protest against falling onion prices, bring auction to halt: Maharashtra https://sabrangindia.in/farmers-protest-against-falling-onion-prices-bring-auction-halt-maharashtra/ Tue, 01 Oct 2019 09:48:28 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/10/01/farmers-protest-against-falling-onion-prices-bring-auction-halt-maharashtra/ Agitation comes after government bans onion exports with immediate effect Image Cortesy: PTI A day after the Centre banned the export of onions and imposed stock limits for traders, the auction at the country’s largest wholesale onion market at Lasalgaon, Nashik was halted by farmers protesting over the fall in prices. Farmers also staged a […]

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Agitation comes after government bans onion exports with immediate effect

Farmers protest
Image Cortesy: PTI

A day after the Centre banned the export of onions and imposed stock limits for traders, the auction at the country’s largest wholesale onion market at Lasalgaon, Nashik was halted by farmers protesting over the fall in prices. Farmers also staged a ‘rastaroko’ on the Mumbai-Agra highway at Umrane and at Vincur on Nashik-Aurangabad road.

The government banned exports in a bid to tame prices that have doubled in the domestic retail market since July.

Farmers staged demonstrations at the Lasalgaon Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC), but the auction was resumed later in the day, traders said. At some Agricultural Produce Market Committees (APMC), the farmers forced the wholesale mandis to close as auctions started on very low quotes – an official said that onions from six trucks were auctioned on Monday with minimum price being Rs. 2,601, maximum being Rs. 3,351 with the average at Rs. 3,065 (a Rs. 600 drop).

In other markets, those who had brought thousands of quintals of onion for sale, were stranded for the entire day as the traders stopped auctions demanding clarity on government orders.

The imposed stock limits of 100 quintals per retailer and 500 quintals per wholesaler made onion producers in Lasalgaon see red. It is interesting to note that while in the past, the Centre had authorized the State to impose stock limits, this time it has imposed these limits on its own.
The commerce and industry ministry amended the export policy of onion, making it ‘prohibited’ from ‘free’ earlier.

The onion has always been a politically sensitive crop in India.Farmers allege that the Centre took the decision to ban exports and impose stock limits with an eye on the Maharashtra Assembly polls. This decision, they said, was taken despite onions being expected to arrive from the South as well as Pune, Chakan, Ahmednagar and Nashik in the next three weeks, naturally reining in the prices.

How It All Started
Onions have been everywhere in the news this past month. While retail prices of onions, a key cooking ingredient shot up to Rs. 70 – 80 per kg in Delhi owing to last year’s drought and depleted supplies after months of incessant rainfall in producing states, in a bizarre incident of dark humor, a farmer reported a theft of onions worth Rs. 1 lakh in Nashik. 

But it is not just the rains that are to blame for this surge. The profiteering by traders by marking up prices has led middlemen to make a huge killing in just a few days. Big traders and distributors are heavily marking up their prices to the tune of 51% and 48% of the original price respectively. Given all the data on the production of onions, the only explanation is that the supply of onions is being artificially restricted by cartels operating out of Mumbai and Bengaluru hoarding huge stocks to drive up prices.

The season of Navratrialso adds to the spike in the prices of onions when the consumption of the vegetable goes down.

What Did The Government Do To Help?
With Maharashtra and Haryana Assembly elections only a month away, the government had to walk a tight rope – of not upsetting farmers who are an integral part of their rural voter base, and pacifying urban consumers who are seen shelling out more money for the bulbous vegetable following the surge in prices.
On September 6, the state-run Metals and Minerals Trading Corporation (MMTC) floated contracts for importing 2,000 tonnes of onions from Pakistan, Egypt and China among other countries. MMTC later dropped Pakistan from the list. The Centre also hiked the Minimum Export Price (MEP) to 850 dollars per tonne.

Anticipating the shortage, the Centre had created a buffer stock of 57,000 tonnes of which 18,000 tonnes have already been offloaded. With supplies through agencies like the National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation (NAFED) and National Cooperative Consumers Federation of India (NCCF), the supply of onions will be boosted, said Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar. These organizations are selling onions from the buffer stock at Rs. 22-23 per kg, while Mother Dairy’s Safal stores are selling it at Rs. 29.30 per kg.

The government has also asked states to take strict measures, including raids, to prevent hoarding by traders.

Onions and Elections – Deep Fried Politics
To provide harrowed consumers some relief, Delhi CM ArvindKejriwal said that onions procured from the government’s buffer stock would be sold at 400 fair price (ration shops) and 70 mobile vans between 10 AM and 5 PM between all assembly constituencies. Each person would be able to buy a maximum of 5kg at Rs. 23.9 per kg.

The BJP condemned this move and alleged that the Delhi government was trying to earn a profit from the sale of onions. It claimed, “The Centre is selling onions at Rs. 22 per kg and supplying it to Delhi government for Rs. 15.9 per kg to ensure that there is no scarcity. By selling it at Rs. 23.9 a kilo, the Delhi government is trying to earn profits.”

The small bulbous crop, the onion, has even in the past shaken up governments from their core.

They became a poll issue in the 1980 general elections when Indira Gandhi used the price rise to her advantage during campaigning to show how uncaring the then Prime Minister ChaudharyCharan Singh had become of the ordinary people. It clicked. The Congress won 67% of the LokSabha seats.

In 1998, a sharp price rise in onions, dethroned the BJP government of Chief Minister, MadanlalKhurana in Delhi thereby establishing a new metric for good governance – the price of onions.

In 2010, tables turned when errant rainfall in onion producing regions led to a country-wide shortage of onions. Recognising the political dangers of expensive onions, an otherwise reticent Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh described it as a “grave concern”. Exports were stopped, import duties were cut and the government appeared to be in damage control mode.

The BJP also suffered a stinging defeat in Rajasthan credited to the lowly onion. After his loss, Chief Minister Bhiaron Singh Shekhawat was famously quoted as saying – “The onion was after us.”

Battling the Price Rise – A Long-term Solution
A ban on exports is a sub-optimal solution. Instead of the current ad hoc measures that the government is applying to augment efforts should be channelized into investing in scientific storage and processing facilities.

It would also do well for policy makers to look at the reported suggestions offered by Ashok Gulati, former Chairman of Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices to tackle the onion crisis. He has underscored the need to promote modern cold storages and develop a system similar to that of the warehouse receipt system for farmers.

Farm experts also favor setting up dehydrating units and promote demand for dehydrated onions amongst large consumers.

In conclusion, it is evident that the government needs better policy responsessuch as creating more refrigerated storage facilities so that surplus onions can be stored longer. Apart from that, it needs to increase the rate of processing of onions through incentives, so that consumers can quickly substitute onions for onion paste and dehydrated varieties in times of crunch.

Keeping in mind the production data and the weather forecasts, policymakers need to put together a comprehensive picture of supply-side situations much in advance, so that a stitch in time saves nine.

Related Articles:

  1. As Onion prices soar over Apples, Nashik farmer reports theft of his Stock
  2. What is Behind Sky-High Onion Prices?

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As Onion prices soar over Apples, Nashik farmer reports theft of his Stock https://sabrangindia.in/onion-prices-soar-over-apples-nashik-farmer-reports-theft-his-stock/ Wed, 25 Sep 2019 07:53:53 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/09/25/onion-prices-soar-over-apples-nashik-farmer-reports-theft-his-stock/ Govt. finds it difficult to manage fluctuations in prices Image Courtesy: TOI Pyaaz, Mirch, Bhakri, the sustenance of India’s toiling agrarian class. A raw onion, a green chilly and a Bhakri (bhākri, bhakkari) is a round flat unleavened bread often used in the cuisine of the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and Goa. […]

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Govt. finds it difficult to manage fluctuations in prices

Image result for As Onion prices soar over Apples, Nashik farmer reports theft of his Stock
Image Courtesy: TOI

Pyaaz, Mirch, Bhakri, the sustenance of India’s toiling agrarian class. A raw onion, a green chilly and a Bhakri (bhākri, bhakkari) is a round flat unleavened bread often used in the cuisine of the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and Goa. But with the unchecked crisis in the agrarian economy, this basic and nutritious vegetable is denied to millions.

September 2019, as the prices of this most essential commodity, an important ingredient of almost every Indian meal, onions touched sky rocketing prices, a bizarre incident of theft of onions worth Rs. 1 lakh in Nashik district of Maharashtra also added a touch of black humour to an unfolding crisis. The retail prices of onion prices have touched as high as Rs. 60-80 per kg mark in cities such as Delhi and Mumbai. Even in Chennai the prices are around Rs. 60 per kg.

In the midst of this, onion farmer Rahul Bajirao Pagar approached the Nashik police on Monday and informed that he had kept a ‘summer stock’ of 25 tonne onions in 117 plastic crates at his storehouse in Kalwan taluka, as per police inspector Pramod Wagh.

However, on Sunday evening, to his utter dismay, he found that the entire stock worth nearly Rs. 1 lakh was missing, Pagar said in his complaint. Inspector Wagh said that based on his complaint a case of theft has been registered and search is on.

At the Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC) in Nashik, the summer onion stocks are being auctioned for around Rs. 3,500 to Rs. 5,000 per quintal (per 100 kg), as per a source.

Meanwhile in another incident, some unidentified persons allegedly mixed urea (fertiliser) in the onion stock of farmer Vishnu Aher in Bhaur village, an official at Devla police station said. The farmer in his complaint alleged that the mischief resulted in rotting of about 120 tonnes of his onions worth Rs 5 lakh, he said.

Not only has the price rise added to a common person’s burden, but also has shown the gaps in the management of such essential commodities by the government. The government, in order to curtail prices, issued tenders to import onion from Pakistan. This decisions has been opposed by farmers.

Maharashtra and Haryana Assembly elections are weeks away, just around the corner, even as the states were grappling with other problems such as the floods in Maharashtra, this onion crisis has posed several challenges for masses of our people.

The recent rise in onion prices has been a result of last year’s drought and a delayed monsoon this year. The situation is exacerbated by excessive rainfall in onion-growing areas, which has delayed the harvest period by a week or so.

About 90 percent of India’s onion comes from the states of Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal. Of this, Maharashtra contributes to nearly one-third of the country’s production of the vegetable.Nashik, Pune, Ahmednagar, and Aurangabad form the onion-growing belt of Maharashtra.

The onion crop is grown in three phases throughout the year, -Kharif (which is sown in May-July and harvested in October-December); late kharif (which is sown in August-September and harvested in January-March); and Rabi (which is sown in October-November and harvested in April).

To prevent the crop form sprouting and getting spoilt, farmers usually store their onion produce in moisture-proof and dust-proof structures, called kanda chawl. They release their produce steadily depending on the price of onion in the market, which enables continuous supply.

This year, the cultivation of onion in the rabi crop cycle decreased in Maharashtra – from 3.54 lakh hectares in 2017-18 to 2.66 lakh hectares in 2018-19.

As if this wasn’t enough, Karnataka received unprecedented and heavy rainfall during the harvest period of the onion grown in kharif season. In addition, the arrival of kharif onions from Karnataka has been delayed after the state was lashed with heavy rains a couple of weeks ago.

While markets saw the arrival of 35,000 quintals per day in September last year, the amount has dropped to 25,000 quintals this year. The new batch of kharif onion crop grown in Maharashtra would not hit the market before the end of October this year. Until then, the stored rabi crop will be supplied to the market.

Currently, the Centre has a buffer stock of 56,000 tonnes of onion, of which 16,000 tonnes has been offloaded so far. In Delhi, 200 tonnes a day is being offloaded, news agency PTI reported.However, most worrying is the fluctuation that this commodity’s prices face in the market. For example, just this February the onion prices kept plummeting to an all time low. This caused a serious distress among farmers, so much so that many committed suicides.

In 2018, Maharashtra faced an oversupply of the kitchen staple due to excessive holding of kharif onions or Gavthi onions, which have a longer shelf-life and usually arrive by March. That year, there was a massive storage of such onions. Farmers retained their stock for over six months in the expectation that prices would rise. But they never did, and by December, panic-stricken farmers literally dumped the onions.

History of onion cultivation

Interestingly, onions are one of the oldest cultivated vegetables in human history. Although most scientists agree that onion cultivation started around 5000 BC in Asia, some believe that it was Central Asia that pioneered this, while other believe that it originated from Iran and West Pakistan. Archeological evidence shows that onions were planted by ancient Egyptians about two thousands year later.

Onions grow easily and are easy to plant! That is the reason why onions were among the first vegetables to be consumed and domesticated.

They can grow in multitude of soils and climates. They are less perishable than other vegetables and can be dried and stored for long periods as well as consumed when food is scarce.

In addition to their culinary use, onions are cherished for their antiseptic and medicinal use. Ancient Egyptians used onions in art and mummification and buried their Pharaohs with onions. Onions were cultivated and used by other civilizations like the Chinese (5000 years ago), the Sumerians (2500 BC), the Babylonians, the Greek, the Romans, and among ancient Indians.
 

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What is Behind Sky-High Onion Prices? https://sabrangindia.in/what-behind-sky-high-onion-prices/ Wed, 25 Sep 2019 05:50:26 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/09/25/what-behind-sky-high-onion-prices/ More than ‘short supply’, profiteering by traders is behind the ongoing high prices. But why is the government beating around the bush instead of acting fast?   Within weeks – in fact days – onion prices have gone through the roof across the country, reminding everybody of the periodic spikes in the past that caused […]

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More than ‘short supply’, profiteering by traders is behind the ongoing high prices. But why is the government beating around the bush instead of acting fast?

Sky-High Onion Prices
 

Within weeks – in fact days – onion prices have gone through the roof across the country, reminding everybody of the periodic spikes in the past that caused governments to fall. In Delhi, for instance, the price of onions at the local sabziwala is ranging at Rs 60-80 per kilogramme, almost three times what it was a couple of months ago.

It is being said that the complex crop cycle has been disrupted, first due to last year’s drought in Maharashtra and Karnataka (two major onion producing states) followed by floods in both regions. Onions are sown three times in one year and supply is sustained round the year by storing some portion of the harvest (especially the winter one) to tide over lean months. There is some truth to this, as we will see later. 

But first, have a look at another aspect. Taking Delhi as an example, onion was sold at the Azadpur mandi at a wholesale price of just Rs. 27.74 per kg but big traders and distributors sold it onwards at a retail price of Rs.42 per kg to small retailers. These in turn transported it to various local shops which sold onions at an average of Rs.60 per kg.

Delhi%20Price.png

In other words, there was a 51% mark-up at the first stage, followed by a hefty 48% mark-up at the second stage. This, in a nutshell, is the way the onion price rise is playing out, whether in Delhi or elsewhere. Middlemen, especially big traders are making a huge killing in just a few days.

Having said this, let us look a bit deeper into the onion problem that keeps popping up every once in a while.

According to the third advance estimate of horticulture crops for 2018-19, issued by the agriculture ministry, onion production was 23.28 million tonnes in the agricultural year ending June 2019. This was practically the same as last year. So, it can’t be that onion supply has fallen drastically leading to a demand supply problem.

Yet, there is a sharp fall in the arrival of onions in wholesale markets, as per latest data from the National Horticulture Board (NHB). As the chart below comparing monthly arrival between January and September for 2018 and 2019 shows, last September, saw arrival of 3.98 lakh tonnes of onion while this year, till September 23, onion arrivals were less than half at 1.63 lakh tonnes. 

Onion%20Arrival.png

In fact, the current year is marked by a steady declining trend in onion arrivals, which is quite the reverse of last year. Given the fact that last year’s production was practically the same as this year, this is bizarre.

The only explanation is that the supply of onions from the two major producing regions is being artificially restricted. This is not something that is unknown – in the past there have been multiple complaints against cartels operating out of Mumbai and Bengaluru that corner and hoard huge onion stocks in order to drive up prices. 

In addition, there is also some disruption caused by flooding – damage to stored onions from winter, and transportation difficulties. But these would not have caused supply to halve.

The effect of this restricted supply [See chart below] has been dramatic. Last year, onion prices fell till May then increased till July and then dipped slightly till September. But this year, there has been a steady rise throughout the year, according to NHB.

Onion%20WholeSale.png

What is notable about the prices, and can be see clearly in the chart above, is that retail prices are consistently above wholesale prices by a considerable margin – upward of 40%. The farmers are thus getting much less prices while the consumers are paying through their nose. 

Which brings us to the heart of the whole maze. In times of shortage, the absolute profit made by big traders rises phenomenally. They do pay slightly higher prices to farmers (or their proxies), but the mark-up goes up much more than in times of normal supply. As shown in the chart below, the difference between retail and wholesale prices has inexorably increased this year from about Rs.727 per quintal (or Rs.7.27 per kg) in January 2019 to a breathtakingly high of Rs.1,372 per quintal (Rs.13.72 per kg) currently, in September this year, according to NHB. That’s a near doubling of the margin that traders are making out of the onion trade.

Price%20Difference.png

Note that last September the margin was Rs.808 per quintal, from which it has increased almost 70% to its present Rs.1,372 per quintal level. 

That’s the real face of this Great Onion Robbery. And, what is the government doing about it? One has not heard of any raids on warehouses in Pune or Mumbai or Nashik or Bengaluru, although there are reports of thieves making off with tonnes of onions. Till date, the government has hiked up the minimum export price to prevent onion exports and issued a tender for import (withdrawing Pakistan’s name from it after protests). What was needed was swift and strong action against hoarders, breaking up of cartels and release of onions into the market to bring down prices. Also, onions could be procured and sold at affordable prices till the next crop comes in. All this would have saved people from unnecessary expenditure. The government’s inaction, especially in Maharashtra, which is the big centre of onion production, may have been driven by the impending Assembly polls in that state, many are speculating.

Courtesy: News Click

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