According to the data released by the agriculture ministry, the acreage under tur has fallen by nearly 6% and in the case of urad and moong, itтАЩs close to 4% each. Overall acreage under pulses stood at 129.5 lakh hectares during this season compared to approximately 135.5 lakh hectares during last year.
Speaking at a webinar organised by India Pulses and Grains Association (IPGA), Union consumer affairs secretary, Rohit Kumar Singh said there will be demand for pulses in the next couple of months and the production outlook is not excellent this year. тАЬWe are expecting that the seamless flow imports will help us ease the situation in terms of pricing,тАЭ he added.
Singh said the tur and urad are already under the free import regime.
The secretary said, itтАЩs a reality that India has to import pulses to meet the domestic demand till it becomes self sufficient. тАЬIf you donтАЩt have enough domestic production, you keep your borders open for facilitating the import of pulses from the overseas market and this year we have had a comparatively stable import regime in terms of pulses,тАЭ Singh said.
He added that earlier, the decisions for imports were for three months or six months. But this has been changed to give the right signal to the farmers in other countries who primarily produce pules for India. While the annual domestic production of pulses is around 260 lakh tonnes, India consumes more than 270 lakh tonnes.
IPGA chairman, Bimal Kothari said even though the monsoon was delayed, there has been a тАЬmore proactive monsoon in July and AugustтАЭ, which can increase the production. He added that better production will тАЬeventually maintain the price stability and lessen dependence on importsтАЭ.