Kolkata: The West Bengal government has placed an order for 800 tonne of imported onions with National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India (NAFED) for delivery by December-end to support the supply of the staple at a fair price, an official said Wednesday.
The state government placed the order at a landed cost of Rs 55/kg at Mumbai port with NAFED, which has been tasked to distribute the vegetable.
“We have placed orders for 200 tonne per week, totalling 800 tonne for delivery within December. The landed cost of onion at Mumbai port is Rs 55 per kg and in Kolkata it will be at least Rs 65 a kg, taking freight into account,” said the senior government official.
The onions are being imported from Egypt. Following reports that wholesale prices of top grade onion jumped to Rs 5,400 per 40 kg bag at Nasik, a week-old onion stock at this city’s Posta wholesale market rose to Rs 125 a kg, Wednesday, sources told this agency. This indicates that best quality onions in the retail market are inching closer to the Rs 150 per kg-mark.
Though state agencies are keeping a close watch on the wholesale markets, they do not propose to put a cap on the price, at least for now, as officials fear it will worsen availability.
If NAFED is successful in delivering the onions in time, the West Bengal government has a proposal to distribute these through fair price shops, a source said.
There is a lag of at least five-seven days before Nasik onions can be sold in this city’s wholesale markets. Freight accounts for Rs 5 a kg from Nasik to Kolkata.
Bengal government officials blamed the Centre for the crisis. “The intervention by the Centre is late. The import order should have been placed at least a month back to avert such massive price rise,” an official said.
It should be mentioned here that the West Bengal government is selling onions at a subsidized rate of Rs 59 per kg through its ‘Sufala’ stores and mobile vans, as against a procurement cost of Rs 88 for each kilogram.
PTI