Freight
Train Shortage Blocks Rice Export Shipments
Nearly a third of India's rice exports for this
month are stuck due to a shortage of freight trains and most traders have stopped
signing February export contracts to avoid demurrage charges, industry
officials told Reuters.
The slowdown in exports from India, the world's
biggest rice exporter, has allowed rival suppliers such as Thailand, Myanmar
and Vietnam to increase overseas sales at higher prices.
Slowing exports could force the Indian government
to increase procurement from farmers.
Shipments of more than 500,000 tonnes of non-basmati rice that need to be transported to
ports on India's east coast from the central state of Chhattisgarh have been
stuck due to the shortage of freight trains, dealers said.
They are part of around 1.5 million tonnes of rice that India had planned to export this month.
"Cargoes cannot move from producing centres to ports because of freight train scarcity,"
said Nitin Gupta, vice president of agricultural commodities trader Olam
India's rice business.
"There is no clarity on the availability of
trains so nobody is offering fresh cargoes."
Railway authorities have diverted wagons to ship
fertilizers and to serve thermal coal power plants to ensure adequate power
supply this winter after power plants ran out of coal a few months ago.
The delay in Indian shipments is hitting
exporters hard as vessel rates have risen to $30,000 per day and some exporters
need to pay as much as $500,000 in demurrage charges, wiping out their entire
margin, said Himanshu Agarwal, executive director at
Satyam Balajee, India's biggest rice exporter.
Traders have started quoting higher prices for
overseas shipments to cover higher demurrage charges, and prices for India's 5%
broken parboiled variety of rice have risen to $380 per tonne,
the highest in six months.
Higher prices and shipping delays are prompting
some buyers to switch to rival suppliers such as Thailand and Myanmar, said
B.V. Krishna Rao, president of India's Rice Exporters Association.
Thailand's 5% broken rice prices rose last week
to their highest since mid-July 2021 at $404-$405 per tonne.
"We have requested the Ministry of Commerce
and Industry to help us by increasing railway wagons' availability," Rao
said.
India's Ministry of Commerce
and Industry and Ministry of Railways did not immediately respond to
requests for comment on Monday.
In the
past traders use to switch to road transport in the absence of railway wagons,
but truckers have substantially raised freight charges in the past six months
after diesel prices jumped to a record high, said a dealer with a global
trading firm.
"At
least for near-month shipments, Asian and African buyers are switching to
Thailand, Myanmar and Pakistan. Indian exports could fall in the March
quarter," he said.
India
cornered nearly half of global rice shipments in 2021 as its exports surged 45%
from 2020 to a record 21.4 million tonnes, or more
than the combined exports of the next three largest exporters Thailand, Vietnam
and Pakistan, according to provisional government data.
India's rice production has
jumped to a record high in the current year and prices are still competitive,
but logistics' bottlenecks are limiting exports, said Himanshu
of Satyam Balajee.