Monday 15 July 2019

FARM STORAGE CRUNCH

India stares at farm produce storage crunch of
35 mn tonnes: Nabard
Storage on rental basis in private warehouses offers little; cotton output could aggravate
problem further
Rajesh Bhayani | Mumbai July 24, 2018 Last Updated at 01:37 IST
Harsh Kumar Bhanwala, chairman of the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development
(Nabard), says the assessment is of an agricultural produce storage gap of 35 million tonnes (mt).
The agri procurement season’s peak is May-June. Agri finance and warehouse industry sources expect
a huge requirement after the kharif harvest, with over 10 grain, cereal and oilseed crops trading below
the government's Minimum Support Price (MSP).
Nabard has sanctioned a total of 9.29 mt of scientific grain storage capacity, of which 3.85 mt is
operational. Nabard is the largest financer in this sector, said Bhanwala. Due to the shortage of
storage, government procurement agencies usually take warehouse facilities on rent. Food
Corporation of India (FCI) has a scheme where it assures renting for a specified number of years
when private companies build.
Despite all this, storage is a problem. In the past, grain was stored in open silos; this is being
gradually replaced with more scientific storage. Hetal Gandhi, director at CRISIL Research, says only
a normal crop increase can be accommodated at current capacity. Additional procurement is likely to
be tougher this year for states such as Telangana, Tamil Nadu and Andhra, where storage utilisation
levels last year had exceeded 80 per cent.
As of January, total storage capacity with government agencies FCI and Central Warehousing
Corporation, beside state warehousing corporations, including hired capacities, was 73.6 mt.
Gandhi says average utilisation of these warehouses was 70-75 per cent in 2016-17. Current capacity
allows additional stocking of 16-19 mt of grain. Wheat and rice are the key crops procured. In crop
year 2017-18, a third of the production of these crops was procured by the government.
Last month, foodgrain stock in the central pool was 68 mt or over 90 per cent utilisation, much higher
than at the same time last year, at 55.5 mt (75 per cent utilisation). If more commodities which have
seen a sharp rise in MSP are to be procured, such as pulses, oilseed and cereals, there could be a
storage problem. If state-owned Cotton Corporation of India joins in, this problem will aggravate

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