Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Asia has eye-watering Onion prices after India bans exports

FROM Kathmandu to Colombo, it's a kitchen nightmare: Onion prices have gone crazy.

That's because India, the world's biggest seller of the Asian diet staple, has banned exports after extended Monsoon downpours delayed harvests and supplies shrivelled. And dedicated buyers across the region, like Nepalese housewife Seema Pokharel, are flummoxed.


"This is a terrible increase," said Pokharel, out shopping for vegetables in Kathmandu. "Onion prices have more than doubled in the last month alone."

Whether it's Pakistani chicken curry, Bangladeshi biryani or Indian sambar, Asian consumers have developed a serious dependence on Indian onion supplies for go-to dishes.

Shorter shipment times than from rival exporters like China or Egypt play a crucial role in preserving the taste of the perishable commodity.

But last Sunday New Delhi banned all exports from India after local prices jumped to Rs 4,500 ($63.30) per 100 kilograms, their highest in nearly six years, due to the delay in summer-sown crop arrivals triggered by longer, heavier rains than usual.

Since the ban, countries such as Bangladesh have turned to the likes of Myanmar, Egypt, Turkey and China to increase supplies in a bid bring prices down, government officials and traders said.

But the hefty volumes lost will be hard to replace.

India exported 2.2 million tonnes of fresh onions in the 2018-19 fiscal year ended March 31, according to data from India's Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority. That's more than half of all imports by Asian countries, traders estimate.

Rising prices of alternative supplies will add to the headache for importers trying to get the vegetable from elsewhere, said Mohammad Idris, a trader based in Dhaka.

In the Bangladesh capital, consumers are now being asked to pay $1.42 per kilogramme for their prized onions - twice the price a fortnight ago and the highest since December, 2013.

"Prices are going up elsewhere in Asia and Europe," said Idris.

"Other exporting countries are taking advantage of the Indian ban" to raise their asking price.

In response to the crisis, the government of Bangladesh has initiated sales of subsidised onions through the state-run Trading Corporation of Bangladesh (TCB).

"We are looking for all possible options to import onions. Our target is to import in the shortest possible time," said TCB spokesman Humayun Kabir.

But the shipments from elsewhere - Iran and Turkey are also potential suppliers - that authorities in countries across the region are investigating will all take time.

"It takes one month when it comes from Egypt and about 25 days from China, while it takes only a few days from India," said Dhaka trader Idris.

The need for alternative imports is so severe, though, that countries like Sri Lanka have already placed orders with Egypt and China, said G Rajendran, president of the Essential Food Commodities, Importers and Traders Association.

Onion prices in Sri Lanka have risen by 50 per cent in a week, to $1.7 per kilogramme.

For other countries, there may be little option but to sit tight and hope for the best.

Malaysia, the second-biggest buyer of Indian onions, expects the ban to be temporary and sees no reason to panic, said Sim Tze Tzin, deputy minister of agriculture.

But even India has been importing onions from Egypt in an effort to calm prices. And there won't be any meaningful drop in prices before summer-sown crops start to hit the market, said Ajit Shah, president of the Mumbai-based Onion Exporters' Association.

That's not expected until mid-November, meaning the export ban isn't going away in the near term.

"India could resume exports once prices drop, but it will take time," said Shah. "Until India resumes exports, supplies will remain limited in Asia."

For now, consumers like Kathmandu shopper Pokharel are having to change habits across Asia.

"I went to buy five kilogrammes of onions for our five-member family but ended up buying only 3 kilogrammes due to higher prices," said Afroza Mimi, a Dhaka housewife on a shopping expedition the day after India imposed the export ban.

"They (traders) are selling old stock nearly at double the price. This is crazy."

(Reuters)

More For You

Rishabh-Pant-ton-Getty

Pant, who scored 134 in the first innings, reached a 130-ball century in India’s second innings, hitting 13 fours and two sixes. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Pant makes history with twin centuries, England eye record chase on final day

RISHABH PANT became the first India batter to score centuries in both innings of a Test against England on day four at Headingley, but England responded strongly to leave the series opener finely poised going into the final day.

England will resume on Tuesday at 21-0, needing 350 more runs to reach a target of 371, with all ten wickets in hand as they aim for a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.

Keep ReadingShow less
UK braces for second heatwave

The UK has started the week with a noticeable drop in temperatures after the recent spell of hot weather

iStock

UK braces for second heatwave as temperatures climb midweek

Key points

  • UK sees a cooler start to the week after recent heatwave
  • Temperatures forecast to rise again by Wednesday in parts of England
  • Midlands, eastern and southeastern England could see highs of 30°C
  • Overnight humidity may lead to heavy, thundery showers midweek
  • Glastonbury and Wimbledon expected to enjoy mostly dry, warm weather

Warm spell returns after short-lived fresher weather

The UK has started the week with a noticeable drop in temperatures after the recent spell of hot weather. However, this break from the heat is expected to be brief, with forecasters predicting a second rise in temperatures for parts of England by midweek.

A south-westerly airflow replacing the recent westerlies will begin drawing warmer air back into the country. This shift means areas in central and southeastern England could again see temperatures reaching the high twenties by Wednesday, bringing the possibility of a second UK heatwave, especially across eastern regions.

Keep ReadingShow less
Air-India-crash-victims

Mourners carry the coffins of victims who died in the Air India Flight 171 crash, for funeral ceremony in Ahmedabad on June 21, 2025. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Air India crash: All but one of 260 victims identified

AUTHORITIES in Gujarat said on Tuesday they had identified 259 out of the 260 victims recovered after the Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad earlier this month.

The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner was heading to London’s Gatwick Airport when it crashed shortly after take-off on June 12.

Keep ReadingShow less
Iran Israel conflict

Emergency personnel work at an impacted residential site, following a missile attack from Iran on Israel, amid the Israel-Iran conflict, in Be'er Sheva, Israel June 24, 2025.

Reuters

Israel orders strikes on Tehran after Iran missile attack amid ceasefire

ISRAELI defence minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday he had instructed the military to strike targets in Tehran after Iran fired missiles, violating a ceasefire that had come into effect following 12 days of war.

"In light of Iran’s blatant violation of the ceasefire declared by the President of the United States — through the launch of missiles toward Israel — and in accordance with the Israeli government's policy to respond forcefully to any breach, I have instructed the IDF (Israel Defence Forces)... to continue high-intensity operations targeting regime assets and terror infrastructure in Tehran," Katz said.

Keep ReadingShow less
BTS Suga donates £3 million to build South Korea’s first music therapy autism centre

Suga of BTS Donates 5 Billion Won for Autism Centre Focused on Music Therapy in Seoul

Getty Images/Twitter/BTS News & Updates

BTS Suga donates £3 million to build South Korea’s first music therapy autism centre

Quick highlights

• BTS’ Suga has donated 5 billion won (£3 million / ₹25 crore) to Severance Hospital in Seoul to build a treatment centre for children with autism.

Keep ReadingShow less