oilseeds. Mustard may gain area at the cost of chana, wheat this year

Vishwanath Kulkarni Updated - October 16, 2021 at 03:19 PM.

Farmers likely to switch over as oilseed prices are 67% higher Vs MSP

NEW DELHI, 15/06/2021: Mustard brought by farmers being cleaned by a daily wage labourer at Nàjafgarh wholesale Grain mandi outskirts of New Delhi on June 15, 2021. Thousands of farmers, mainly from Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, have been camping at Delhi’s borders for more than six months now in protest against the three laws that they say will leave them at the mercy of big corporates and end the MSP regime. Photo: SHIV KUMAR PUSHPAKAR/ The Hindu

Mustard is set to gain area from wheat and chana as farmers are seen planting more of the oilseed crop this rabi sowing season. The trade expects farmers to increase the area on account of higher prices and favourable climate, even as the early sowing has begun in the key producing States of Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.

According to data from the Agriculture Ministry, mustard has been planted in about 2.80 lakh hectares (lh), mainly in Uttar Pradesh, the second-largest producing State as on October 14. This represents an increase of 55 per cent over same period a year ago.

The Centre has fixed the minimum support price (MSP) for mustard for the July 2021-June 2022 crop year at ₹5,050 per quintal, up 8.6 per cent or ₹400 over ₹4,650 fixed for the last crop year. Current market prices are hovering around ₹7,800 per quintal in Rajasthan, higher by 67-68 per cent. “Mustard sowing starts during Navratra and peaks around Diwali. In the forthcoming rabi season, we are expecting an area increase of 6-7 lakh hectares,” said Anil Chatar of Marudhar Trading Agency in Jaipur and Chairman of All India Mustard Crop Committee of The Central Organisation for Oil Industry and Trade (COOIT).

The normal area under mustard is about 61.55 lh, according to the Agriculture Ministry. “Seeing the current weather and price trend, farmers will plant more of mustard. There will be some shift in area from wheat and chana from mustard,” Chatar said adding that crop size may rise by 10-15 per cent.. “In the upcoming rabi season, we are expecting mustard area to be 70 lh and crop size of 94-95 lakh tonnes,” Chatar said. “The mustard area should increase looking at the current price levels and higher soil moisture. However, it is difficult to estimate the growth in area,” said B V Mehta, Executive Director, Solvent Extractors Association of India (SEAI). “In the case of soyabean, there was an expectation that the acreages would grow by 6-7 per cent this kharif, but the acreages stood at last year’s levels, in spite of higher prices at the time of sowing. There will be a growth in mustard acreage, but difficult to estimate,” Mehta added.

Sowing to pick up

Further, Mehta said that the sowing will pick up with the dip in the day temperature levels across North India in the days ahead. “The current temperatures in North are around 30 degrees centigrade. Sowing will pick up once the temperatures come down to the level of 20-25 degrees,” Mehta said. According to the fourth advance estimate of the Agriculture Ministry, mustard production was pegged at 101.2 lakh tonnes last crop year, higher than the industry estimates of around 86 lakh tonnes.

Mustard sowing has begun in parts of Rajasthan, Haryana and Madhya Pradesh. However, the pace of sowing is slow this year, said Umesh Verma, spokesperson for P Mark Mustard Oil. “Generally, sowing is over by mid-of October, but this year it is too hot in all these places and that it why it is getting delayed. Though However, reports of farmers planting more mustard is quite positive and there are indications from ground that we may get to see 20-25 percent increase in acreages by the time sowing is over by the end of October” Verma added.

Chatar said, production in Rajasthan is expected to rise to 38-40 lakh tonnes during the current crop year against last season’s 35 lakh tonnes. In UP, the output is seen rising to 15 lakh tonnes (13 lakh tonnes current year), Punjab and Haryana at 11-11.5 lakh tonnes (9.5 lakh tonnes) and in MP at over 10 lakh tonnes (8.5 lakh tonnes). In Gujarat the output is seen rising to 4.5 lakh tonnes (4 lakh tonnes) and in rest of India including West Bengal and Eastern India at 17 lakh tonnes (14.5 lakh tonnes).

Of the 86 lakh tonnes produced last year, the current stock could be around 15 lakh tonnes including farmers and industry, Chatar added

Published on October 15, 2021 16:06