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India Rice Exports Fall as Iran War Curbs Gulf Basmati Trade

  • Indian rice prices are already under pressure after record harvest
  • Exporter expects reduced shipments until Iran war resolved
  • Shipping costs rise on higher insurance and freight rates

MUMBAI, May 27 (Reuters) - India's ​rice exports in the first four months of 2026 fell marginally from a ‌year earlier as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran disrupted premium basmati variety shipments to Gulf markets, two government officials said on Wednesday.

India, which accounts for more than 40% of world rice exports, usually ships more ​than the combined exports of the next three biggest suppliers - Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan.

Its ​declining exports will add to pressure on Indian prices, which have fallen ⁠more than 5% this year following a record rice harvest.

The country's rice exports during ​January to April fell 1.3% from a year ago to 8.39 million metric tons, the officials ​said. They declined to be named because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

Exports of basmati rice fell 7% during the period to 2.3 million metric tons, as shipments to markets, including Iran, ​declined. Non-basmati rice exports edged up to 6.09 million tons from 6.03 million tons ​a year earlier.

NEW DEALS STALLED AS SHIPMENTS ARE DELAYED

One exporter based in New Delhi, who also asked not ‌to ⁠be named, said shipments were expected to remain below typical levels until the Iran war ends.

Rice cargoes bound for Iran, Iraq, Qatar and Saudi Arabia remain delayed in transit because of the conflict, leading buyers and exporters to hold back on new deals, the exporter said.

India ​mainly ships non-basmati rice ​to markets such ⁠as Bangladesh, Benin, Ivory Coast, Guinea and Cameroon, while its premium basmati rice predominantly goes to buyers in Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran and ​the United Arab Emirates.

Iran was India's biggest market for basmati rice ​until last ⁠year when Saudi Arabia surpassed it, according to government figures.

Shipping insurance and freight costs have risen since U.S.-Israeli airstrikes began the war on Iran at the end of February, leading to disrupted ⁠maritime ​traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. That has weighed ​on demand for non-basmati rice from African buyers, an exporter based in Kakinada, southeastern India, said.

India competes with Thailand, ​Vietnam, Myanmar and Pakistan in the global rice market.

Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav; editing by Barbara Lewis

Source: Reuters


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