High prices may hit ginger exports

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| China has increased its prices to $1,250 a tonne from $1,050 during the first week of December, as the production season has approached the fag end. |
| Nigeria offers ginger at a tag of $950, while the Indian spice quotes around $1,550-1,600. The higher tags may force the country to depend mainly on the Middle East market, where the Indian variety is preferred traditionally. |
| Meanwhile, the domestic demand, especially from North India, is at a higher level, thanks to a peak winter. |
| The rising demand has set the domestic tags at the higher end, as imported ginger is of an inferior quality. A normal green ginger crop at around 700,000 tonne is estimated in the current season that has commenced since November 2006. |
| However, the production of dried ginger may not increase considerably, as there is a very good demand for green ginger across the country. |
| The rising demand for green ginger, coupled with an increase in production cost and unremunerative prices, is set to hinder the production of dried ginger in 2007, said experts. c |
| The best quality now fetches Rs 7,000 a quintal, while the average variety is quoted around Rs 4,500-5,000. A couple of years ago, the prices had gone up to the Rs 15,500 level. |
| TOO HOT |
| INDIA's quotations are fairly higher than those of China and Nigeria |
| CHINA offers ginger for $1,250 a tonne while Nigeria has priced it at $950. Indian spice quotes around $1,550-1,600 |
| THE HIGHER tags may force the country to depend mainly on the Middle East market |
| EXPERTS estimate the new year production in the country to be around the normal 15,000 tonne |
First Published: Jan 04 2007 | 12:00 AM IST