Australia ships 14,500 tonnes chickpeas and 128,043 tonnes lentils in July

Published 2024년 9월 10일

Tridge summary

In July, Australia's chickpea exports significantly decreased by 63% to 14,500 tonnes, with India, Bangladesh, and Nepal being the main importers, while lentil exports experienced a 5% drop to 128,043 tonnes. India, Bangladesh, and Egypt were the leading markets for lentils. The decrease in exports is attributed to high stock levels and competition from Canada's new crop. The chickpea market is particularly thin, with prices surging due to India's tariff removal in May, leading to anticipated low export volumes in the coming months.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Australia exported 14,500 tonnes of chickpeas and 128,043t of lentils in July, according to the latest data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The chickpea figure is down 63 percent from the 38,816t exported in June, and shows the usual seasonal rundown in the lead-up to new-crop exports expected to start in October. On lentils, the month-on-month drop was only 5pc, with stocks at much higher levels than chickpeas which allowed several bulk cargoes to load. The three largest markets for July-shipped chickpeas were India on 9288t, Bangladesh on 1582t and Nepal on 905t. India on 52,631t was also the biggest market for lentils shipped in July, followed by Bangladesh on 32,058t and Egypt on 14,402t. Egypt is normally a containerised market for Australian lentils, but the ongoing threat of Houthi attacks on container vessels in the Red Sea has pushed them into bulk cargoes shipped in combination with faba beans. According to Lachstock Consulting’s latest vessel line-up report ...

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