The government of Bangladesh has
planned to subsidise potato export to boost its shipment after a bumper
harvest saw cold storages teeming with the new crop and farmers
worrying over major slide in prices, officials said Sunday.
The move comes after potato yield this year crossed an estimated
nine million tonnes, topping the national requirement by at least two
million, resulting in precipitous fall in local prices, commerce
minister Faruk Khan said.
“We are planning to support potato export so that the farmers are protected from any further price slide,” Khan told the FE.
The exporters said the increased demand for the tuber for exports
along with storing of 35 lakh tonnes of potato at cold storages, has
helped the prices rebound. On month-on-month basis, the prices of
potato rose 16.67 percent to Tk 9-Tk 12 a kilogram in the city markets,
according to Trading Corporation of Bangladesh. Plant Protection Wing
data showed that 9,687 tonnes of potato were mainly shipped to Malaysia
and Singapore in the fiscal year 2009-10. Along with these markets, this year, exports have started to such new markets as Russia, Sri Lanka
and Vietnam. SA Quader, managing director of Agri Concern Ltd, said a
fall in output in Europe, especially in Russia, has accelerated the
demand for potato from South Asian countries including India and
Pakistan.
”A vacuum has been created on the global market. Russia has suffered a
shortfall of 40 lakh tonnes because of drought,” said Quader. The exporters are looking for new markets
as farmers had a production glut through the second year. Last year,
farmers bagged 81 lakh tonnes of potato. The current year’s production
is expected to exceed the last year’s level. ”We are also trying to
export to South Africa,” added Quader, urging the government to fulfil
its promise of giving 20 percent cash subsidy. According to the exporters, the vast exports of the tuber crop are usually done in the February-April period.
No comments:
Post a Comment