A lot of alternatives to China for garlic, ginger

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Bangladesh could import garlic from Malaysia and Egypt as an alternative to China, where in fact the outbreak of a lethal, pneumonia-like virus named coronavirus has resulted in a breakdown in the supply chain of the spice.

The country can be considering India, Pakistan and Indonesia alternatively sources for another key cooking ingredient, ginger, according to a Bangladesh Tariff Commission (BTC) report recently obtained from the commerce ministry.

This recommendation comes at the same time when the disruption in the supply chain for spices imported from China has led to increased prices for garlic and ginger in the domestic market for the past month.

The purchase price for garlic, an essential cooking ingredient, increased by 44 % to Tk 180-210 per kilogram in Dhaka by yesterday, according to market price data compiled by the Trading Corporation of Bangladesh.

Retail charges for ginger raised 8 % from what it was per month ago to Tk 100-180 per kilogram.

The BTC report, that was recently submitted to the commerce ministry, said that Bangladesh is heavily reliant on Chinese imports for both spices to meet the country's total annual requirements.

The country consumes six lakh tonnes of garlic and three lakh tonnes of ginger each year.

The import data for garlic and ginger revealed that China accounts for 96 % of the 52,500 tonnes of garlic imported through the July-December amount of the fiscal year.

The remainder was imported from India and Myanmar.

Private importers brought 69,500 tonnes of ginger to the united states during the first-half of fiscal 2019-20.

China supplied 41 % of that total, while India provided 28 % and Myanmar 21 per cent. The remaining 3 % came from other areas of the world, the BTC said.

The report also explained that China is the biggest exporter of both garlic and ginger.

China makes up about 38 % of the world's total way to obtain ginger and 67 % of the total way to obtain garlic. India and Germany are two other major exporters of ginger.

In the case of garlic, Spain and Argentina will be the second and third biggest suppliers respectively, said the report.

However, since Malaysia and Egypt, two other major garlic producers, are nearest to Bangladesh geographically compared with Spain and Argentina, the country could consider importing the ingredient from there instead of China.

Bangladesh could also import ginger from India, Vietnam and Pakistan on similar grounds, the BTC added.

An estimate on the production of garlic and ginger from the agriculture ministry implies that Bangladesh's import dependence for ginger is 42 % and for garlic it is 13 per cent.

One of the factors behind the shortage in local supply is a portion of the merchandise always get damaged while in storage, the report said.

In today's fiscal year, farmers cultivated 8 per cent more garlic to 85,700 hectares than fiscal 2018-19, based on the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE).

About 6.10 lakh tonnes of garlic was produced in fiscal 2018-19, down 11 % from the prior year.

Domestic production of ginger declined 10 per cent year to 15,300 hectares from the prior fiscal year.

Farmers harvested 1.90 lakh tonnes of ginger during fiscal 2018-19, down 15 per cent from the prior period, according to DAE estimates.

Source: https://www.thedailystar.net

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