farmer too must be thought of.” Before the Gujarat elections in December 2017, the Minimum Export Price (MEP) of onion was set at a whopping $850 per tonne, a move meant to discourage exports to stabilise prices. Dipak Pagar, director of the Nampur wholesale market in Nashik, says, “Days earlier to it, the average traded price of onion was around Rs 35 per kg. After the MEP, prices corrected to Rs 25-24 per kg.” That MEP was removed only early this month.
Till two years ago, Gorade would grow onion all three seasons — kharif (June-July, with harvest in September), late kharif (September- October, with harvesting post-December) and rabi (December-mid January, with harvest post-March). It’s only the rabi onion which is amenable to storage, and it’s this onion that feeds the market from April till new produce hits the markets after August.
Heavy losses in 2015-16 broke the onion cycle for Gorade. “I was forced to sell my rabi onions for Rs 2-3 per kg, against production cost of Rs 9.50, which wiped out my savings and left me in debt,” he says. In 2016, Gorade kept away from onion and diversified part of his land to develop a nursery.
But in 2017, Gorade’s vineyards suffered heavy losses due to rains, while onion prices firmed up in June, and so he is giving onion another shot. Gorade notes that the low prices in 2015-2016 followed another announcement of MEP, at $300 per tonne, in end-2014. “Prices fell and remained low, despite the government removing export restrictions by end of December 2015,” he says.
In November 2017, apart from the $850 MEP, the 38-year-old says, “For the first time in Nashik, Income Tax sleuths conducted raids to look for stored onions at traders’ godowns.” About the removal of the MEP a few days ago, Gorade says, “By far, it was the fastest removal of MEP I have seen in my 20 years of onion trade. If it had not been done, the markets would have seen a bloodbath.” Of India’s average production of over 200 lakh tonnes of onion, more than 180 lakh tonnes is consumed at home. Just about 10-15 per cent is exported. In 2017, till October, before the MEP was imposed, 16.79 lakh tonnes of onion had been exported. Farmers from Takli Vinchur normally take their produce to the Lasalgaon wholesale market. Onion is currently trading there at Rs 18.46 per kg, down from Rs 28.62 kg in January. Gorade is not sure if the prices will last, given that another bumper crop is in the offing.
About the possibility of post-harvest processing of the bulb, Gorade says, “Onion powder has demand in Europe, but who will buy it in India?” Above all, he adds, what onion farmers need is for the sector to be freed of frequent government intervention. “It becomes news when onion prices go up, but when we suffer, there is hardly any attention, both from the media and government.”