Forbes India: Gandhidham
(Gujarat): Wednesday, 11 December 2019
China is
the largest importer of Indian salt, 80 percent of which comes from Gujarat. As
demand for its finished products is falling, so is that of the raw material
used, causing the state's salt manufacturers and farmers losses of more than Rs
100 crore
Forty-five-year-old
Narubhai Koli, a traditional Agariya (salt farmer) in Gujarat, is confused at
the current state of the salt industry.
Koli, a
resident of Santalpur village in Patan district, was told by the salt trader,
to whom he sells his produce, that there is a slowdown in the market and thus,
he won't be able to buy more salt, without further explanation.
Truth is
that the trade war between the United States and China has hit the salt
industry in Gujarat, the primary salt producing state of India and also the
home state of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. China is the largest importer of
salt from India; China’s chemical factories, which consume the most salt, have
cut down on purchases as demand for their finished products decelerated because
of increased US tariffs.
Like
Koli, numerous salt farmers have felt the hit of this slowdown, but aren’t
aware of how the trade war between two other countries is impacting their
livelihoods, says Harinesh Pandya, founder of Agariya Heetrakshak Manch, an NGO
which works for the welfare of small salt farmers.
Indian
Salt Manufacturers’ Association (ISMA) vice-president Shamji Kangad told Forbes
India that salt export to China has halved from normal levels. Kangad is a
director at Neelkanth Salt and Supply, a Gujarat-based company that deals with
manufacturing and exporting salt.
Of the
30 million tonnes of salt produced in India every year, Gujarat accounts for 80
percent of production. While the annual turnover of Gujarat salt manufacturing
industry is roughly Rs 2,000 crore, the border state exports about 10 million
tonnes of its annual production to China and Japan, earning about Rs 700 crore.
Around 4 million tonnes of salt is exported to China every year for de-icing
and industrial purposes.
According
to Kangad, demand from China dropped by about 0.5 million tonnes between
January and June, and dipped by the same amount in July. August saw a further
decline by another 0.2 million tonnes. Gujarat’s salt makers are currently
exporting 1.5 to 2 million tonnes of salt to China. The export revenue has reduced
to between Rs 100 crore and Rs 150 crore since January.
A study
by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) shows that
US imports from China subject to tariffs fell to $95 billion between January
and June, from $130 billion during the same period in 2018.
“For the
rest of the year, we assume another fall of around 0.4 to 0.6 million tonnes in
exports to China,” added Kangad who is also the secretary of Kutch Small Scale
Salt Manufacturers Association.
Pandya
adds that the salt farmers live in the Little Rann of Kutch for eight months of
the year, an area which is submerged in the monsoon. “They live in extremely
difficult conditions to generate yield. The government has allocated 10 acres
to each family to produce 1,500 to 2,000 tonnes of salt annually, to earn about
Rs 50,000 per year,” he says.
“Now,
they are struggling with excess stock. They already live in miserable
conditions. This trade war is likely to have a great impact on them,” he added.
Rain
check
BC
Raval, president of the ISMA which is a 70-year-old body of salt makers
comprising big names such as Tata, Birla and Nirma said that China uses Indian
salt to primarily make caustic soda, soda ash and glass, along with detergent
and textiles. Some other industries that need it as a raw material are
case-hardened steel, rubber, brass, paper, plastic and polyester.
Huge
mounds of salt are visible in the open at production sites in coastal parts of
the Kutch district and adjoining areas. However, despite the bleak export
scenario with China, the unusually heavy rain in Kutch region has played a
saviour of sorts.
The
heavy September rains in the otherwise dry Kutch region has washed away a
substantial portion of the salt stocks kept in the open. This has not only
improved the quality of the salt by washing away impurities like magnesium, but
also balanced the stock.
Laxman
Tejabhai Ahir, the owner of the TM Ahir Salt Works in Moti Chirai village in
the Kutch district, said that Kutch received about 25 percent of the average
rainfall last year, compared to the current year’s 160 percent. As there was
limited rainfall last year, much of the stock was not washed away. As exports
to China declined, the stock increased during July and August, he added.
However,
due to the extended monsoon, the normal production period is also likely to be
delayed by a month or two, starting in December or January instead of November,
giving manufacturers some buffer time to adjust for the extra stock.
“The
rains have made the salt purer, and thus, costlier,” adds Abhishek Parekh,
executive director of Ankur Chemfood, a major processor and packager of salt in
Kutch. “The rain reduces magnesium content in the salt by four to five times,
and save the client purification costs. That’s why this set will command a
premium.”
The
next steps
Every
year, about seven million tonnes of salt are used for domestic purposes, and
another seven million by Indian industries, mainly caustic soda manufacturers.
Crude
oil rates increased up to $66 per barrel and caused a subsequent rise of $5 to
$6 in the freight per ton for shipment from the Kandla port in Gujarat to
China, due to which the exports also became non-viable. Kangda predicts that if
the US-China trade war continues, crude prices could go up to $70 a barrel,
which would be a big problem for the salt industry.
Production
next year is expected to be around 30 percent lower than the normal figure of
around 24 million tonnes in the state. Salt exported to China is normally
priced at Rs 500 to Rs 800 per ton, while raw or low-quality salt is not
exported. Japan takes 90 percent of its total imports in the form of high-grade
salt, while China imports 50 percent of high-grade and 50 percent medium-grade
salt, which it uses for industrial purposes.
Kangda
says that export incentives for salt-manufacturing establishments are crucial.
“The salt industry has provided jobs to a large number of people, despite the
low-cost product and comparatively smaller turnover,” he says. “Moreover, the
lease renewal procedure is tiresome, and should be revised. Firms are given a
two-year lease, which prevents them from having long-term export agreements.”
(The author is an Ahmedabad-based freelance
writer and a member of 101Reporters.com, a pan-India network of grassroots
reporters)
No comments:
Post a Comment