Allow Import Of Oilseeds Under Ogl, Urges Sea

Image
BSCAL
Last Updated : May 01 1998 | 12:00 AM IST

Ajay Tandon, president of the Solvent Extractors Association of India (SEA), pleaded union finance minister Yashwant Sinha to allow import of oilseed and oil-bearing materials under OGL till the nation reaches self-sufficiency in oilseeds production, to overcome the raw materials shortage and provide a level playing field to domestic industry as its finished products - vegetable oil - is freely importable but its raw materials - oilseeds and oil bearing materials - are not freely importable.

Oilseed import will not hurt the growers as the same will only partly replace the vegetable oil imports.

In a pre-budget memorandum submitted to the finance minister, Tandon appealed to encourage the exploitation of non-traditional sources of vegetable oils like rice bran, minor oilseeds of trees and forest origin, cottonseed and oilcakes, etc to reduce dependence on imported vegetable oils.

Tandon said that in the last three years, excessive import of vegetable oils to tide over the gap between demand and supply has adversely affected the domestic crushing industry and farmers alike.

This has led to stagnancy in oilseed production. Therefore, it is necessary to regulate import of vegetable oils through variable custom tariff or through some other mechanism depending on the local demand, supply and price situation, Tandon further said.

He also urged to institute price spikes as recommended in the World Bank report.

As long as import of edible oil is necessary, import of crude edible oil should be preferred to refined vegetable oils by imposing higher import duty on the latter to encourage the domestic refining industry.

Tandon urged the reintroduction of the money credit scheme for usage of solvent extracted minor oils in the manufacture of soap; and to restore excise duty exemption for soap stock, acid oils, spent nickel catalyst and by product oxygen gas. He also urged that tax structure on oilseeds derivatives be rationalised.

The solvent extraction industry, consisting of 600 solvent extraction plants having overall processing capacity of 30 million tonne, processing oilseeds, oilcakes and rice bran is operating now at about 33 per cent only. Industry recovers over 1.5 million tonne of vegetable oils and produces over 11 million tonne of oilmeals per annum.

He revealed that solvent extraction industry is passing through a crisis due to acute shortage of raw materials (oilseeds), and the depressed international markets for oilmeals have caused a drastic fall in export earnings in current year. It shall also fall short of the commerce ministrys export target of $900 million.

He added that this industry is exporting over 4.3 million tonne of oilmeals earning foreign of over Rs 3,000 crore per annum.

*Subscribe to Business Standard digital and get complimentary access to The New York Times

Smart Quarterly

₹900

3 Months

₹300/Month

SAVE 25%

Smart Essential

₹2,700

1 Year

₹225/Month

SAVE 46%
*Complimentary New York Times access for the 2nd year will be given after 12 months

Super Saver

₹3,900

2 Years

₹162/Month

Subscribe

Renews automatically, cancel anytime

Here’s what’s included in our digital subscription plans

Exclusive premium stories online

  • Over 30 premium stories daily, handpicked by our editors

Complimentary Access to The New York Times

  • News, Games, Cooking, Audio, Wirecutter & The Athletic

Business Standard Epaper

  • Digital replica of our daily newspaper — with options to read, save, and share

Curated Newsletters

  • Insights on markets, finance, politics, tech, and more delivered to your inbox

Market Analysis & Investment Insights

  • In-depth market analysis & insights with access to The Smart Investor

Archives

  • Repository of articles and publications dating back to 1997

Ad-free Reading

  • Uninterrupted reading experience with no advertisements

Seamless Access Across All Devices

  • Access Business Standard across devices — mobile, tablet, or PC, via web or app

More From This Section

First Published: May 01 1998 | 12:00 AM IST

Next Story