- Two months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended global agricultural trade.
- Indonesia is set to ban exports of cooking oil in the wake of a local shortage and soaring prices, adding to a raft of crop protectionism around the world.
- Soybean oil futures in the U.S. have nearly doubled since the start of 2021, driven in part by higher demand for ingredients to make biofuel.
The world’s supply of cooking oil is dwindling, already strained by war as reported by Economic Times.
Global agricultural trade
Two months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended global agricultural trade, Indonesia is set to ban exports of cooking oil in the wake of a local shortage and soaring prices, adding to a raft of crop protectionism around the world.
The country accounts for more than a third of global vegetable-oil exports, with China and India, the two most populous countries, among its top buyers.
”Indonesia is the biggest producer of palm oil, the world’s most consumed edible oil.”
In the U.K., some supermarkets are limiting purchases of cooking oils, like sunflower, olive and rapeseed.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has thrown the trade of sunflower oil into chaos and is squeezing already tight supplies of other vegetable oils used in food, biofuels and personal care products.
Edible oils
Weather woes across the world’s major producers of edible oils are adding to fears of shortages.
While limited supply and soaring prices are set to worsen inflation of food items like salad dressing and mayonnaise in wealthy economies like the U.S., developing nations like India are set to feel the worst impacts.
Such countries depend on imports of palm oil as a cheaper alternative to more costly soybean, sunflower and canola oil.
“We are terribly shocked by this decision of Indonesia,” said Atul Chaturvedi, president of Solvent Extractors’ Association of India, an edible oil trade group.
The surge in core food costs is also leading to the biggest debate in a decade overusing farmland to grow crops for producing fuel.
“We desperately need the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to take the right action to allow soybean oil stocks to shift back into food instead of being diverted to biodiesel production,” said Robb MacKie, the trade group’s president.
Food-versus-fuel
Food-versus-fuel tensions are also flaring in other regions, including Indonesia.
The latest action by Indonesia is certain to “aggravate” food inflation that’s already at a record high, said Tosin Jack, commodity intelligence manager at Mintec in the U.K. Tight vegetable oil supplies are already prompting food manufacturers to improvise with their products, including trying to come up with new formulations and switch to substitutes when possible, according to Jack.
For makers of packaged items like chips — whose ingredient lists often allow flexibility by stating the food can contain multiple vegetable oils — the move by Indonesia takes one more oil off an ever-shrinking list.
Soybean oil futures in the U.S. have nearly doubled since the start of 2021, driven in part by higher demand for ingredients to make biofuel.
Prices then shot up to the highest on record after Russia’s attack on Ukraine disrupted sunflower oil shipments and set off demand for alternative commodities.
Shortages
Canadian canola had already climbed to an all-time high last year as devastating drought shrank crops across North American prairies.
Palm oil in Asia has risen about 50% and rapeseed in Europe by 55% in the past 12 months.
He noted that Indonesia exported 26.87 million metric tons of palm oil in 2021 compared with consuming 15.28 million metric tons domestically.
For now, Indonesia’s ban intensifies worries about food costs and shortages, with expectations that other countries are likely to make similar moves as the war in Ukraine drags on.
“We’re likely to see a few more,” said Rabobank’s Mera.
Did you subscribe to our newsletter?
It’s free! Click here to subscribe!
Source: Economic Times