Indo ASEAN Relations : News, Updates & Discussions

Some SE Asian nations dither on joining India-based solar alliance
The India-headquartered International Solar Alliance’s (ISA’s) drive to co-opt countries from South-East Asia is facing problems with some countries holding back because of New Delhi’s decision to not join the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) trade deal, said two people aware of the development.

Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, Thailand, Brunei, Indonesia, and Laos are yet to become a signatory of the ISA, the first treaty-based international government organization headquartered in India. Myanmar has signed and ratified the agreement, while Cambodia is yet to ratify it and has the status of observer.

This comes against the backdrop of China’s attempts to co-opt countries into its ambitious One Belt One Road initiative, a programme to invest billions of dollars in infrastructure projects, including railways, ports and power grids, across Asia, Africa and Europe.

“Some of these countries are linking joining ISA with our reluctance to join RCEP," said one of the two people mentioned above, a senior Indian government official, requesting anonymity.

As many as 84 countries have signed the framework ISA agreement. Of these 63 have ratified it.

Another person, who also didn’t want to be named, confirmed the development.

RCEP is a proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) —Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam—and its six FTA partners. Last November, India decided not to join RCEP, with the government being under intense pressure from domestic industry, farmers and political parties over fears that joining would lead to dumping of Chinese goods that could wipe out small scale industries.

Queries emailed to the spokespersons of India’s ministries of external affairs, commerce, and new and renewable energy, the Singapore high commission and the Vietnam embassy remained unanswered at press time.

Queries emailed to an ISA spokesperson on Thursday also remained unanswered till press time.

The ISA has become India’s calling card on climate change and is increasingly seen as a foreign policy tool. ISA was termed as a political project by France at the solar alliance’s second general assembly held in New Delhi from 30 October to 2 November last year.

Initially, ISA envisaged 121 sunshine countries situated between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn as its members. Prime Minister Narendra Modi later announced the “universalization" of membership with India moving the proposal to make all United Nations members eligible for ISA membership.

The alliance has achieved some success, with the cost of solar-powered agricultural pumps coming down by half, as reported by Mint on 28 November. India’s state-run Energy Efficiency Services Ltd conducted the largest global price discovery exercise by aggregating the demand from 22 ISA member nations, in a potential order valued at $2.7 billion.

India has pitched ISA as a counterweight to Vienna-based Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec), with fossil fuel consumers calling for a global consensus on “responsible pricing" against the backdrop of uncertain global oil prices.
Some SE Asian nations dither on joining India-based solar alliance
 
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India palm import curbs to start Malaysia, Indonesia price war: Association

Last Updated : Jan 09, 2020 10:49 AM IST | Source: Reuters

The Indian Ministry of Commerce and Industry issued a notification on Wednesday declaring that the import of refined palm oil "is amended from 'Free' to 'Restricted.'

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India's restrictions on imports of refined palm oil will lead to a price war between the world's two biggest suppliers of the commodity, Indonesia and Malaysia, the Palm Oil Refiners Association of Malaysia said on Thursday.

The Indian Ministry of Commerce and Industry issued a notification on Wednesday declaring that the import of refined palm oil "is amended from 'Free' to 'Restricted.'

"This puts Indonesia and Malaysia at loggerheads," Jamil Haron, chairman of Palm Oil Refiners Association of Malaysia, told Reuters. "There will be a price war between Indonesia and Malaysia, and we are at the losing end."

India palm import curbs to start Malaysia, Indonesia price war: Association
 
India warns palm oil buyers against Malaysian imports

Tuesday, 14 Jan 2020
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MUMBAI: Indian palm oil importers have effectively stopped all purchases from Malaysia after the government privately warned them to shun the product from the country following a diplomatic spat, industry and government sources said.

The warning, issued last week, comes almost in parallel with New Delhi’s move to restrict imports of refined palm oil and palmolein after Malaysia’s Prime Minister criticised India’s actions in Kashmir and its new citizenship law.

Currently, Indian buyers are not making any crude or refined palm oil purchases from top supplier Malaysia, at least five industry sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

“Officially there is no ban on crude palm oil imports from Malaysia, but nobody’s buying due to government’s instructions, ” said a leading refiner, adding that buyers now import from Indonesia despite paying a premium to prices in Malaysia.

India is the world’s largest buyer of palm oil and the move to effectively block imports from Malaysia could put pressure on palm oil prices in Malaysia and push up palm oil inventories in the country.

Malaysian prices set the global benchmark for palm oil prices. The move could also benefit Indonesia - the world’s largest exporter of crude palm oil (CPO).

“We could import CPO from Malaysia, but the government has warned: ‘Don’t come to us if your shipments get stuck, ’” said a Mumbai-based trader, adding “no one wants to see their shipments get stuck at ports.”

India’s government has not made any public remarks about Malaysian palm oil. The commerce ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment yesterday.

Palm oil accounts for nearly two-thirds of India’s total edible oil imports. India buys more than nine million tonnes of palm oil annually, mainly from Indonesia and Malaysia.

Indian refiners and traders have shifted almost all palm oil purchases to Indonesia, despite having to pay a US$10 per tonne premium over Malaysian prices, four traders told Reuters. Malaysian crude palm oil for February shipment was available at US$800 a tonne on a free-on-board (FOB) basis, compared to US$810 from Indonesia, traders said.

“Like everyone else, we are paying a premium for Indonesian supplies. For a small profit we can’t gamble, ” said a refiner based at Kolkata. — Reuters

India warns palm oil buyers against Malaysian imports
 
Malaysia looks to Pakistan after Indian palm oil controls

Nor Arlene Tan
January 13, 2020 02:28
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Malaysia may expand its palm oil trade with Pakistan following controls imposed by the Indian government on refined palm oil imports. (Shutterstock)

Highlights :
  • India is world’s biggest palm oil importer and in 2018 imported $5.1 billion worth
  • Palm oil restrictions are seen as New Delhi retaliation following Malaysian criticism

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia may expand its palm oil trade with Pakistan following controls imposed by the Indian government on refined palm oil imports.

“Pakistan is one of Malaysia’s most regular and dependable buyers of local palm oil and products,” Malaysian Primary Industries Minister Teresa Kok said on Sunday.

Kok met Pakistan’s Adviser for Commerce, Textiles, Industry and Production and Investment Abdul Razak Dawood on an official visit to Pakistan.
“In 2018, Pakistan imported 1.16 million metric tons of palm oil from Malaysia valued at RM2.97 billion ($730 million). Avenues were discussed to further expand Malaysian palm oil share in this growing market,” said a statement by the Ministry of Primary Industries in Malaysia on Sunday following the minister’s visit.

India’s Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) last week announced restrictions on the import of refined palm oil and palm olein, a liquid form of palm oil. Importers will now be required to apply for licenses.

Indian media reported that while the announcement was “not country-specific, but product-specific,” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government had “informally” requested palm oil refiners and traders forgo Malaysian palm oil.

India is the world’s biggest palm oil importer and in 2018 imported $3.8 billion worth of palm oil from Indonesia, and $1.3 billion from Malaysia. The two Southeast Asian countries are the world’s main producers in the palm oil industry.

The Indian import controls came after remarks by Malaysian Prime Minister regarding India’s actions on Kashmir and the new citizenship law last year.

A Malaysian political analyst from the Singapore Institute of International Affairs, Dr. Oh Ei Sun, said that the restriction “doesn’t help to improve bilateral relations” and is seen as New Delhi’s retaliation to a series of remarks made by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad regarding India’s widely criticized citizenship laws and Kashmir lockdown.

“We speak out our minds and we don’t retract and change,” said the 94-year old leader at a press event in October regarding his UN speech last year calling for a UN resolution on the Jammu and Kashmir conflicts.

He also spoke out against the new citizenship legislation last year during the KL Summit in December, claiming that the new law would “deprive some Muslims of their citizenship.”

Mahathir’s decision to allow controversial Indian preacher Zakir Naik to remain in Malaysia also upset Modi.

“As India is a major buyer of Malaysian refined palm oil, palm oil refining industry will, of course, be significantly affected,” Dr. Oh said, adding that it remains to be seen if the broader crude palm oil-producing industry will be affected.

Malaysia looks to Pakistan after Indian palm oil controls
 
India plans more curbs as Malaysia PM talks tough

Sidhartha | TNN | Updated: Jan 15, 2020, 12:00 IST

NEW DELHI: After refined palm oil, the government is looking to further step up the heat on Malaysia with a plan to restrict the import of microprocessors amid indications that the trade dispute is unlikely to be sorted out soon as the Southeast Asian nation continues to rile India over Kashmir and the Citizenship (Amendment Act).

Malaysian PM Mahathir Mohamad’s determination to speak out on what India believes are its internal issues has seen the Modi government working on imposing technical standards on microprocessors and also putting in place a quality control order for telecom equipment, sources told TOI.

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Customs authorities have been asked to ensure compliance of the quality control order as part of efforts to restrict the entry of Malaysian equipment into India, in what is probably the first trade retaliation by India against a country’s political stance.

On Tuesday, Mohamad said he was worried over the trade restrictions but added that he would continue to speak out against “wrong things”.

“We are concerned, of course, because we sell a lot of palm oil to India, but, on the other hand, we need to be frank and see that if something goes wrong, we will have to say it,” the veteran leader told reporters in Kuala Lumpur.

“If we allow things to go wrong and think only about the money involved, then I think a lot of wrong things will be done, by us and by other people,” he added.

A news agency said the 94-year-old leader vowed to find a solution as prices crashed in the futures market after India, the world’s largest buyer of edible oil, decided to move refined palm oil from the list of free imports to the restricted category.

Apart from Mohamad’s comments on Kashmir and CAA, Indian authorities are upset with Malaysia’s reluctance to extradite controversial preacher Zakir Naik, prompting the government to hit back on the trade front. On January 9, TOI had reported that India intended to step up action against Malaysia with restrictions on palm oil and electronics imports.

Separately, the mines ministry is keeping tabs on imports and may initiate action in the coming weeks, officials said. Malaysian palm oil already faces 50% import tariff, due to a 5% safeguard duty, compared to 45% on Indonesian oil. The duty is up for review next month, sources said.

India’s trade with Malaysia was estimated at over $17 billion, with exports pegged at $6.4 billion, while imports were estimated at $10.8 billion.

india news: India plans more curbs as Malaysia PM talks tough | India News - Times of India
 
India's import curbs big blow to Malaysian palm oil

Reuters | Updated: Jan 17, 2020, 14:08 IST
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KUALA LUMPUR: India’s move to restrict palm oil imports from Malaysia will create a huge challenge for the world’s second biggest producer of the edible oil as India has been its top market for the past five years.

India, the world’s largest buyer of edible oils, last week restricted imports of refined palm oil and effectively halted all palm oil purchases from Malaysia in retaliation over the Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's comments on Kashmir and citizenship law.

Malaysia palm oil exports to top destinations

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India has been Malaysia’s top import market since 2014, according to industry data.

Last year, India bought 4.4 million tonnes of palm oil from Malaysia, accounting for 24% of all Malaysian palm oil exports.

The second biggest buyer of Malaysian palm oil, China, bought just 2.4 million tonnes last year, while the third largest buyer was Pakistan with 1.08 million tonnes, according to data from the Malaysian Palm Oil Council.

Malaysia vs Indonesia palm oil exports to India

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Malaysia is talking to the Indian government and trade officials in a bid to resolve concerns over New Delhi’s import restrictions, Teresa Kok, Malaysia’s minister in charge of palm oil, said on Thursday.

She has flagged Africa and central Asia as emerging markets for Malaysian palm oil, and said Malaysia will continue efforts to increase share in the Middle East.

India imports of palm oil from Malaysia vs Indonesia

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But replacing India and getting other countries to buy Malaysian palm oil may not be easy.

Indonesia, the world’s biggest producer of palm oil, boasts lower production costs and has a bigger share of the market in many palm oil-consuming countries. It has also historically offered palm oil at cheaper prices than Malaysia, although recently Malaysian export prices have slumped below Indonesian rates as Indian buyers retreated from the market.

Malaysian palm oil prices slump to steep discount vs Indonesia amid Indian trade sphere

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Leading industry analyst James Fry said India’s restrictions will shift Indian crude palm oil purchases from Malaysia to Indonesia, and Malaysia may end up selling more refined palm oil globally.

On Wednesday, Reuters reported that India was planning to widen curbs on Malaysia beyond palm oil, a move that could further hurt Malaysian revenue.

India is the seventh biggest market for all Malaysian exports, while Malaysia is India’s 17th largest export market.

India's import curbs big blow to Malaysian palm oil - Times of India
 
Palm oil diplomacy

A report suggested that Malaysia did not want to escalate the palm spat with India

By Reuters in New Delhi and Kuala Lumpur
Published 19.01.20, 12:38 AM
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India’s restrictions on palm oil import imposed last week have been seen as a retaliation for Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s criticism of the Indian government (Wikimedia Commons)

Trade ministers from India and Malaysia are likely to meet on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos next week amid a palm oil spat between the two countries, a Malaysian government spokesperson said.

No agenda has been set for the proposed meeting between Goyal and his Malaysian counterpart Darell Leiking on Friday, the spokesman for Malaysia’s ministry of international trade and industry said, adding that the request for a meeting had come from India.

An Indian government source said a meeting was indeed likely with Leiking.

Reuters reported on Thursday that Malaysia did not want to escalate the palm spat with India. A separate Indian government source said it was important for New Delhi to talk things out with Malaysia. India’s restrictions on palm oil import imposed last week have been seen as a retaliation for Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s criticism of the Indian government.

Goyal in Davos

Commerce minister Piyush Goyal will lead the Indian delegation to the 50th World Economic Forum at Davos from January 20 to 24.

Goyal will also participate in an informal WTO ministerial gathering being held in Davos during this period, the commerce ministry said in a statement.

Though Prime Minister Narendra Modi will not be attending the summit, over 100 delegates, including industry captains, are likely to be present at the annual summit.

The Union minister will hold bilateral meetings with the ministers of Australia, South Africa, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, Korea and Singapore. He will also meet the director-general of the World Trade Organisation and secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Additional reporting by our special correspondent.

Palm oil diplomacy
 
Malaysia's Mahathir rules out trade action over Indian palm oil boycott

India was Malaysia's third-biggest market for palm oil and palm oil products in 2018.

20 Jan 2020 01:09PM (Updated: 20 Jan 2020 01:10PM)
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(Photo: AFP/Mohd RASFAN)

LANGKAWI: Malaysia will not take retaliatory trade action against India over its boycott of palm oil purchases amid a political row between the two countries, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Monday (Jan 20).

India, the world's largest edible oil buyer, this month effectively halted imports from its largest supplier and the world's second-biggest producer in response to comments from Mahathir attacking India's domestic policies.

"We are too small to take retaliatory action," Mahathir told reporters in Langkawi, a resort island off the western coast of Malaysia. "We have to find ways and means to overcome that," he added.

The 94-year-old premier of Muslim-majority Malaysia has criticised New Delhi's new religion-based citizenship law and also accused India of invading the disputed region of Kashmir.

Mahathir again criticised India's citizenship law on Monday, saying he believed it was "grossly unfair".

India has been Malaysia's largest palm oil market for the past five years, presenting the Southeast Asian country with a major challenge in finding new buyers for its palm oil.

Benchmark Malaysian palm futures fell nearly 10 per cent last week, their biggest weekly decline in more than 11 years.

New Delhi is also unhappy with Malaysia's refusal to revoke permanent resident status for controversial Indian Islamic preacher Zakir Naik, who has lived in Malaysia for about three years and faces charges of money laundering and hate speech in India.

Mahathir said even if the Indian government guarantees a fair trial, Naik faces the real threat of vigilante action and that Malaysia will only relocate the preacher if it can find a third country where he would be safe.

"If we can find a place for him, we will send him out."

Malaysia's Mahathir rules out trade action over Indian palm oil boycott
 
Palm Oil Cargoes Stuck At Indian Ports After Import Curbs: Report

Reuters | Updated: Jan 20, 2020, 23:27 IST

Thousands of tonnes of refined palm oil are delayed or stuck at various Indian ports after the world’s biggest edible oil buyer placed restrictions on imports amid a diplomatic row with key supplier Malaysia, multiple sources told Reuters. India announced the curbs on imports of refined palm oil on January 8 in a bid to help domestic refiners raise their plant utilisation rates, according to industry officials familiar with the matter. In a typical year India relies on imports for almost all of its supply of the vegoil used in everything from soap to cookies.

But Malaysia, the world’s second-biggest producer and exporter of palm oil, has publicly bridled at New Delhi’s move even as India has stepped up orders from Indonesia, according to Refinitiv data. India has been its biggest market for the last five years, and the row sent benchmark Malaysian palm futures to their worst weekly fall in more than 11 years on Friday.

“More than 30,000 tonnes have been stuck at various (Indian) ports. All theses vessels were loaded before the government restricted imports of refined palm oil,” said a Mumbai-based vegetable oil dealer, who declined to be named citing company policy.

“Usually customs officials allow unloading of commodities that are in transit before any change in regulation. But in the case of refined palm oil, there is some confusion and that is leading to delays.”

Malaysia palm oil prices suffer biggest weekly drop in over 10 years amid Indian trade spat .

A source in New Delhi with direct knowledge of the matter said the restrictions mean importers will need a licence to buy, a tool that could be used to deny or delay shipments from Malaysia. The person declined to be identified citing the sensitivity of the matter.

Another vegetable oil importer said some vessels were stuck at Kolkata port, with some others on the west coast. In one incident at Mangalore port, crude palm oil was unloaded from a vessel, while refined oil was not permitted ashore, said the importer, who also declined to be named citing the sensitive nature of the situation.

Reuters could not ascertain which vessels contained the cargoes that have been held up at Kolkata and Mangalore, nor who the buyers were. A source in Kuala Lumpur, who requested anonymity citing the sensitivity of the matter, said the refined palm oil was from both Indonesia and Malaysia.

Officials at Kolkata and Mangalore ports did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Malaysia’s Sime Darby Plantation , the world’s largest oil palm planter by land size, said none of its refined palm oil was stuck at Indian ports. The company, which has operations in both Malaysia and Indonesia, exported more than 436,000 tonnes of refined palm oil to India last year.

Sudhakar Desai, president of Indian Vegetable Oil Producers’ Association, said refined palm cargoes that reached before the restrictions were placed had been cleared but none after that.

“We don’t think any licenses have been issued for any origin,” Desai said.

A spokeswoman for India’s trade ministry did not immediately respond to an email from Reuters seeking comment.

Refined palm oil cargoes stuck at Indian ports after import curbs: Sources - Times of India
 
Why Malaysian PM Mahathir Mohamed upped the ante against India

Indrani Bagchi | TNN | Updated: Jan 22, 2020, 21:24 IST
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File photo: Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Photograph: Reuters

NEW DELHI: Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed’s decision to step back from escalating a diplomatic row with India may have its roots in domestic politics and Mahathir’s own political legacy.

In the past a couple of months, Mahathir accused India of “invading and occupying” Jammu & Kashmir and railing against India’s new citizenship laws. His remarks invited swift retribution from New Delhi, with the Indian government taking the unprecedented step of curbing refined palm oil imports from Malaysia. India is the world’s largest importer of palm oil and Malaysia the second-largest producer. Per the most recent assessment by Bloomberg, Malaysia stands to lose about $1.4 billion worth of exports if India were to just go back to 2018 import levels.

Why did Mahathir do it in the first place? According to analysts here, it’s part of Mahathir’s own domestic politics, although, as things turned out, he may have overstepped his limits.

Although Mahathir heads the Pakatan Harapan coalition that rules Malaysia, his PPBM party holds only 26 seats in parliament, which gives him weaker negotiating powers. Instead, Anwar Ibrahim’s DAP has 42, PKR holds 50 and Amanah holds 11 in the coalition in the 129-member parliament. According to the original deal, Mahathir was to have made way for Anwar to take over, but has shown little signs of doing that. Most recently, Mahathir has promised to step down after the APEC summit in November.

Mahathir, therefore, has been trying to negotiate for himself a greater space. He has been quite vocal on Malay interests in domestic arenas, highlighting the infighting among the coalition members, lack of economic and political reform, which was one of the reasons the coalition came into power in the first place, defeating the corrupt regime of Najib Razak. He also wants to secure the political future of his son, Mukhriz Mahathir, which might require some internal deal-making.

Second, according to Malaysian media reports, Mahathir is angling for a political alliance with the Islamist party PAS, which holds 18 seats in parliament. Mahathir has been traditionally at daggers drawn with PAS, since he held a secular constituency. But reports say he reckons that a pact with PAS could give him 44 seats, weakening Anwar Ibrahim, who is disliked by the Islamists.

That could be why Mahathir has been highlighting Islamic issues globally, from Kashmir to Palestine, as well as hosting an alternate Islamic summit in December. Whether this works or not is unclear, but, it could backfire on two counts.

India’s decisive action directly hurts the interests of over 600,000 Malaysians who live off the palm oil business, particularly, if Indian buyers move to Indonesia. That is a sizeable chunk of his voting public. Second, over 10 per cent of Malaysian voters are of Indian origin, mostly Hindus and Sikhs. They don’t want to see Malaysia at odds with India, despite losing out over the Malay-first policies of Malaysian governments. These Indians are reportedly also upset at Mahathir giving shelter to Islamist preacher, Zakir Naik, who is wanted in India, and who has been making incendiary speeches against Hindus and Indians generally.

Both these are large and important political constituencies. Mahathir overstepped his bounds, and India’s actions made him acutely aware of the problems therein. That, say Malaysia analysts, could be behind Mahathir backing down somewhat from his earlier truculent remarks.

Malaysian ministers have reached out to the Indian high commissioner in Kuala Lumpur to resolve the problem. Indian officials denied that there would be any meeting between Malaysian and Indian officials in Davos, though Malaysia had hinted at it.

The question now is, how far would India want to take this row? India has made it clear now that it will strike back if its core interests are disturbed, and Kashmir is a core interest. Sources in the government say it’s a step that needed to be taken and showed that India was willing to back up its positions with actions on the ground. But with Mahathir apparently stepping back, India might wait a while to call a truce.

Why Malaysian PM Mahathir Mohamed upped the ante against India | India News - Times of India
 
:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:

Malaysia to buy more sugar from India to help resolve palm oil spat: Source

Posted: 23 Jan 2020; 02:56PM
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A labourer carries a sack filled with sugar to load it onto a supply truck at a wholesale market in Kolkata, India, Nov 14, 2018. Photo: REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri.

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's top sugar refiner said it will increase purchases of the commodity from India, which according to two sources is part of efforts to placate New Delhi amid an ongoing spat over palm oil imports.

MSM Malaysia Holdings Berhad will buy 130,000 tonnes of raw sugar from India worth 200 million ringgit (US$49.20 million) in the first quarter, the company told Reuters. It bought around 88,000 tonnes of raw sugar from India in 2019.

MSM is the sugar refining arm of the world's largest palm oil producer, FGV Holdings, which is an unit of Malaysian state-owned Federal Land Development Authority or FELDA.

The company did not cite the palm oil dispute as a reason for the increase in purchases.

But the two sources, who are familiar with discussions between the company and the government on the purchase, said it was a bid to appease India, which has been urging Malaysia to reduce the trade deficit between the countries.

India, the world's largest edible oil buyer, this month effectively halted Malaysian palm oil imports apparently in retaliation to Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's comments criticising New Delhi over its policy on Kashmir.

Malaysia has said it will look to other markets to sell more palm oil but that may not be easy as India has been the biggest buyer of Malaysian palm oil for the past five years, purchasing 4.4 million tonnes in 2019.

Malaysia's exports to India were worth US$10.8 billion in the fiscal year that ended on March 31, while imports totalled US$6.4 billion.

Malaysia imported a total of 1.95 million tonnes of raw sugar in 2019, according to data from the International Sugar Organization on Refinitiv Eikon. It typically buys more from Brazil and Thailand than from India.

India is the world's biggest sugar producer but is struggling with a surplus. Its exports are expected to rise to a record 5 million tonnes for the 2019/20 season.

MSM said it was expecting the arrival of three shipments of raw sugar from India between January and February.

"This is very good move. It will help India in increasing sugar exports," Praful Vithalani, president of the All India Sugar Trade Association told Reuters about MSM's move to buy more from India.

Around 50,000 tonnes of raw sugar has already been contracted by Malaysia for January shipments, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm.

Malaysia to buy more sugar from India to help resolve palm oil spat: Source
 
India’s curbs on Malaysian palm oil set to shake up sector

India has restricted palm oil imports after Malaysia commented on its policy towards Kashmir, with thousands of tonnes now stuck at ports.


By Soumya Sarkar
Jan. 27, 2020
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Palm oil fruit harvest in Malaysia. Image: pixelthing

The dynamics between key players in the palm oil industry will fundamentally shift unless a diplomatic spat between India and Malaysia can be resolved amicably, experts warn.

India – the world’s largest importer of palm oil and a major market for Malaysia – has started a trade war after taking strong exception to comments by the Malaysian prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad.

Late last year, the Malaysian leader condemned the Indian federal government’s move to revoke constitutional provisions that conferred special status to Jammu and Kashmir, the country’s only Muslim majority state. He subsequently criticised India’s new citizenship law as discriminatory to Muslims. The Indian government views these as internal matters.

India has tended to import most of its refined palm oil from Malaysia and crude palm oil from Indonesia. On 8 January, India’s director general of foreign trade restricted imports of the refined oil, with the government to issue import licences. Industry insiders say this amounts to a ban.

India hasn’t made any public statements linking the restrictions to Mahathir Mohamad’s comments. But an Indian trade ministry official told China Dialogue that the restrictions will continue unless Malaysia stops commenting on India’s internal affairs. “We might add other items [besides refined palm oil] to the restricted list,” he said, on condition of anonymity.

Even before the trade restrictions, the Indian government had in October last year informally asked edible oil importers not to buy Malaysian palm oil in any form, an industry executive said. “Palm oil imports from Malaysia have been declining drastically since then,” he told China Dialogue. “All importers have been replacing Malaysian palm oil imports by buying more from Indonesia,” he said, declining to be named.

Fall in imports

Malaysia’s palm oil shipments to India have indeed seen a precipitous fall in the past couple of months, according to data released by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board. This decline could have severe repercussions in the Southeast Asian country, as exports of palm oil to India had surged in recent times.

As the above data from the Malaysian Palm Oil Council shows, the country exported around 4 million tonnes of palm oil to India in 2019. Out of this, as much as 2 million tonnes was palm olein, a refined palm oil used as a cooking agent. India has been Malaysia’s largest palm oil market for the past five years.

“India’s trade ban will shake up the entire palm oil sector,” said the industry executive, adding that the immediate fallout of the 8 January restrictions are already visible. “Thousands of tonnes of refined palm oil shipments are stuck at ports,” he said, mostly at Kolkata on India’s east coast.

It is unclear whether shipments ordered before the restrictions came into force will be allowed in, the executive said.

India is yet to issue any licences to import refined palm oil, the trade ministry official said, adding that the process is expected to start soon.

Price war on the cards ?

The trade restrictions on refined palm oil could spark a price war on various levels. Malaysia will now have to compete with Indonesia, the world’s largest palm oil producer, on crude palm oil. Indonesian crude palm oil generally costs less than the Malaysian variety.

Together, the Southeast Asian neighbours produce 85 per cent of the world’s palm oil. It is Malaysia’s largest agricultural export, accounting for 2.8 per cent of gross domestic product and 4.5 per cent of total exports.

Malaysia has said that it will not reciprocate with trade measures of its own against India. “We are too small to take retaliatory action,” Mahathir Mohamad said this week at a media briefing. “We have to find ways and means to overcome that.”

Malaysian officials are in informal talks with their Indian counterparts to resolve the issues, the trade ministry official said, adding that these are unlikely to yield results. The restrictions, however, could hurt Indian consumers as well, because Indonesian suppliers have started to charge a premium, explained the industry executive.

Palm oil prices have been rising steeply in recent months, which has caused Indian purchases to drop to a five-month low. Importers compensated by buying more sunflower oil.

Contradictory measures

India’s trade restrictions came a week after it reduced import duties on refined palm oil from 50 per cent to 45 per cent, and crude palm oil from 40 per cent to 37.5 per cent.

This duty reduction was expected to significantly impact India’s palm oil refining industry, according to ICRA Ltd, the Indian arm of Moody’s Investor Services, a market information provider. But with the restrictions, the scarcity of refined palm oil could now present an opportunity for domestic refiners, which are currently operating at only 40 per cent of capacity.

India’s curbs on Malaysian palm oil set to shake up sector
 

Malaysia's Mahathir has toned down criticism of India after palm backlash, says Anwar

06 Feb 2020 05:42PM
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FILE PHOTO: President of the People’s Justice Party Anwar Ibrahim reacts during their general assembly in Melaka, Malaysia, December 7, 2019. REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has dialled back his criticism of India after it sparked a boycott of Malaysian palm oil, his chosen successor Anwar Ibrahim told Reuters on Thursday (Feb 6), urging New Delhi to note the change in tone.

India, the world's biggest buyer of edible oils, last month imposed curbs on refined palm oil imports and informally asked traders to stop buying from Malaysia, the world's biggest producer and exporter of the commodity after Indonesia.

Sources said the move was in retaliation for Mahathir speaking out against a new citizenship law which critics say discriminates against Muslims. Mahathir has also angered India by accusing it of invading and occupying Kashmir, a Muslim-majority region whose autonomy New Delhi took away last year, and is disputed by Pakistan.

Anwar, who expects to succeed the 94-year-old Mahathir later this year under a deal worked out with his former foe, said the Malaysian leader may have gone beyond diplomatic expressions of concerns in his condemnation of the Indian government.

"Countries will not take strong objections when you express concern, but of course in this regard Tun Mahathir has been quite tough and strong," Anwar said in an interview, using an honorific for the premier.

"But since then in the past few weeks, he has tried his level best to contain and try to make the necessary adjustments. I'm sure the leaders in India will take cognisance of the fact that Mahathir did say it, but then he has now refrained from repeating it in the sayings or tone."

Anwar said he and Mahathir had discussed the tension with New Delhi and that it was important to maintain good economic and trade relations with countries like India and China without necessarily having to agree with each other's policies.

Anwar said he would have crafted any criticism of India over Kashmir or the new citizenship law differently than Mahathir.

India's January imports of Malaysian palm oil may have plunged 80 per cent from a year earlier to 40,400 tonnes, according to Refinitiv. India bought 4.4 million tonnes of Malaysian palm oil last year, according to the Malaysian Palm Oil Council.

India's arch-enemy Pakistan, meanwhile, has pledged to buy more palm oil from Malaysia to help offset lost sales to India.

Pakistan may have bought around 135,000 tonnes of Malaysian palm oil last month, a record high, India-based dealers who track such shipments told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Malaysia's Mahathir has toned down criticism of India after palm backlash, says Anwar
 
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Malaysia, India aim to repair soured ties that hit palm trade

Reuters | Updated: Mar 2, 2020, 11:40 IST
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Malaysia's new prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin while signing a document on his first day in office. (Photo: AFP)

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia and India will work on improving ties that soured under former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and badly affected palm oil trade between the countries, officials from both nations said on Sunday.

India is the world's biggest palm oil importer but its purchases from Malaysia, the second-biggest palm exporter behind Indonesia, dropped drastically in recent months after attacks on India's policies by Mahathir.

Malaysia swore in a new prime minister on Sunday after last week's resignation by the outspoken Mahathir, 94, after a power battle in his coalition government.

Wee Ka Siong, a lawmaker expected to gain a ministerial post, said that mending ties is a priority because Malaysian palm oil producers have been suffering because of India's effective ban on purchases.

"Can we just renegotiate? It’s for my country as well as for my people," Wee stated. "Since we are a new government, let the PM, the new government deal with it. We treasure the friendship with India."

An Indian official with knowledge of the matter said that New Delhi is also keen to improve bilateral ties, including palm oil trading, provided that Malaysia keeps out of India's domestic affairs.

India could also invite the new Malaysian prime minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, for a visit this year, the official said on the condition of anonymity.
India put refined palm oil and palmolein on its list of restricted items on January 8, a move sources said was in response to Mahathir's criticism of its actions in Kashmir and a new citizenship law.

Malaysia's January palm shipments to India tanked 85% from a year earlier to 46,876 tonnes, the lowest since 2011.

India accounted for nearly a quarter of Malaysia's total palm oil exports last year and has been the biggest buyer of Malaysian palm oil for five years.

India's curbs on Malaysian imports disrupted global edible oil trade flows, with Indonesia diverting supplies to India, Malaysia rushing to tap markets left behind by Indonesia and India substituting palm with other oils.

Malaysia Palm Oil News: Malaysia, India aim to repair soured ties that hit palm trade | India Business News - Times of India