Rising flood waters send basmati prices up in India, Pakistan

9 Sep 2025, 12:59 AM
Rising flood waters send basmati prices up in India, Pakistan
Rising flood waters send basmati prices up in India, Pakistan

MUMBAI/KARACHI, Sept 9 — Heavy rains and widespread flooding in basmati rice-growing regions of India and Pakistan have raised concerns over output of the premium staple, driving prices higher as supplies are expected to fall.

India and Pakistan exclusively grow aromatic basmati rice, which sells for nearly twice the price of regular varieties and is primarily imported by Britain, the Middle East, and the United States.

Floods have severely affected the basmati rice crop, but with waters now receding, losses are expected to remain limited provided there is no additional rainfall, said Nitin Gupta, senior vice-president at Olam Agri India.

India's northern states of Punjab and Haryana contribute over 80 per cent of the country's total basmati rice production, while Pakistan's Punjab province accounts for more than 90 per cent of its output.

Heavy rainfall in late August and earlier this month caused the Ravi, Chenab, Sutlej, and Beas rivers to overflow, flooding these regions.

Initial assessments indicate that crops such as paddy, cotton, and pulses on nearly one million hectares were affected in Punjab and Haryana, said an Indian government official.

A man pushes his motorbike as he wades through a flooded road amid rain in Lahore, Pakistan, on September 8, 2025.

In Pakistan's Punjab province rice, sugarcane, corn, vegetables, and cotton on thousands of hectares were submerged earlier this month.

The floods have hit farmers hard, just as crops such as basmati rice and cotton were nearing harvest, said Ibrahim Shafiq, export manager at Latif Rice Mills Pvt Ltd.

In India and Pakistan, paddy seedlings are usually transplanted in June to July, with harvesting starting in late September.

The industry was expecting a bumper crop, but the damage is likely to reduce supplies and push basmati rice prices higher, Shafiq said.

"Conservative estimates put the damage at 20 per cent of basmati rice grown in Pakistan ... This would definitely drive up the price for basmati rice in local markets as well as international markets," Shafiq said.

Traders have raised prices by US$50 (RM215) per ton over the past week, and they could rise further if supply shortages remain significant by the end of the harvest, said Gupta of Olam.

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