Foodfarmnewstv

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING
supporting farming as a business with focus on Rice, Cassava, Sorghum and Tomato value chains.

Search This Blog

Total Pageviews

SPONSORED

SPONSORED
Nigerian Institute of Soil Science- NISS

Translate to Other Languages

Latest News




The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)

Sunday 27 January 2019

Bangladesh buying bumps up Australia’s chickpea exports

Bangladesh buying bumps up Australia’s chickpea exports
BUYING from Bangladesh has lifted Australia’s chickpea exports in November to their highest monthly level in three months, according to the latest data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Bangladesh took 17,518t of Australia’s November chickpea exports, or 65 per cent of the monthly total, with the United Arab Emirates on 3334t and Pakistan with 2544t the next biggest buyers.
While not as high as total August chickpea shipments of 28,456t, the November shipment figure chickpea is more than double the October tonnage, and up 88pc on the September amount.
Australian Choice Exports managing director James Hunt said Pakistan’s terms of trade had being eroded by its devalued currency, but it was still likely to join Bangladesh in buying Australian chickpeas for shipment up to February-March ahead of Ramadan.
“Pakistan will have some crop of their own in April, but we would still expect some more interest from Bangladesh and Pakistan,” Mr Hunt said.
South Asia’s monsoon season runs from July to September, and delivered below-average rainfall to key pulse-growing areas in India’s north.
While traders are hopeful India, traditionally Australia’s biggest chickpea market, will soon reopen to imports, the country is still busy consuming its own rabi, or winter, crop harvested last year.
Traders said new-crop Australian chickpeas were coming predominantly from Central Queensland, which had a much better season than southern Queensland and northern New South Wales.
New-crop chickpeas have been trading at up to $870/t delivered up-country packer, about $70/t more than chickpeas harvested in 2017.
Traders said stocks acquired by the now-defunct Special One Grain were helping to supply the old-crop market.
“Old-crop is coming from everywhere.”
DestinationSepOctNovTonnes
Bangladesh039911751821510
Canada6187169172251
Fiji2402347
India1190237357
Iran01210121
Japan210021
Lebanon3003
Malaysia2272094
Mauritius9810025223
Nepal2164109313104567
New Zealand2485687
Pakistan77183178254413440
Papua New Guinea1001
Portugal75000750
Singapore240024
South Africa490049
Spain500050
Sri Lanka076076
Thailand2402448
United Arab Emirates18587033345263
United Kingdom6106048142028
USA8396160339
Yemen750075
TOTAL14334101252696351422
Table 1: ABS data for Australia’s September, October and November 2018 chickpea exports.

No comments:

Post a Comment