Bloomberg
Godrej Industries Ltd, part of a 125-year-old Indian conglomerate, is looking to boost the number of oil palm plantations as the government aims to raise local output and cut the nation’s heavy imports.
The group’s agriculture and chemicals arm Godrej Agrovet Ltd — India’s largest oil palm processor backed by Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings Pte — will more than double the acreage of oil palm trees it manages over the next six years, Chairman Nadir Godrej said in an interview at the company’s headquarters in Mumbai.
Godrej, which runs businesses spanning consumer goods, financial services and real estate, is bolstering its position after PM Narendra Modi’s administration announced last year that it will spend $1.4 billion to help farmers produce more palm oil in the country, the world’s biggest vegetable oil buyer. India, which imports 60% of its edible oil needs, plans to increase the palm area by almost three-fold to 1 million hectares by 2026.
Although India’s target looks relatively small, compared with about 16 million hectares
allocated to palm in top
grower Indonesia and some 6 million in second-biggest producer Malaysia, India’s government is keen to bring down cooking oil imports that surged almost 7% on an annual basis to 14 million tons in the year that ended in October. Palm oil accounted for more than half of the total volume.
“The government is spending a lot of money supporting farmers in the early stages,†Godrej said. “We think that a lot of growth is possible — it’s still a drop in the ocean,†he said. The company, which is supplied by 40,000 hectares of palm plantations in India, aims to add 5,000 hectares next year and then 10,000 hectares every year “for the next five years or so.â€
India has been attempting to increase its domestic edible oil supplies to minimise the risk of frequent spikes in global rates. The nation was roiled by record high prices of palm oil this year following Indonesia’s temporary export ban that worsened global supplies at a time when sunflower oil shipments from the Black Sea region had dried up due to Russia’s Ukraine invasion.