A top-level cabinet committee on food cancelled the three tenders totalling 30,000 tons, which would have represented the first imports of the staple by India a traditional exporter since the 1980s.’We are not importing (rice). We have adequate stocks. We will review (the decision) if there is any need,’ Commerce Minister Anand Sharma told reporters late Friday after the committee met.
The tenders had been floated by state-owned trading firms MMTC, State Trading Corp and PEC.
However, the Press Trust of India quoted an unnamed official as saying: ‘The government does not want to buy at such high prices.’
The decision not to import marks a U-turn from a government announcement when Sharma said
The country of nearly 1.2 billion people produced a record 99.15 million tons of rice last year.
Industry officials said the decision to scrap the purchase tenders might be a strategy to cool rising international prices and that the government could seek to enter the market when it was more favourable.
Global prices rose after
The three state trading firms had been asked to import 10,000 tons of rice each.
Domestic rice prices have soared 25 per cent in the last four months on supply worries after the poor annual rains, which were followed in some areas by devastating floods that hit crops.
Private traders have already imported at least 400,000 tons of rice, in expectation of higher domestic prices, and Indian media reports say the figure is expected to rise.







