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Onion Prices In Delhi Jump 45% To Rs 80/kg In Just One Week

There has been almost three-fold jump in onion prices from the year-ago period.

Heaps of onions at a warehouse in Navi Mumbai, on Sept 23, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)
Heaps of onions at a warehouse in Navi Mumbai, on Sept 23, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)

Onion prices in Delhi have risen by 45 percent to Rs 80/kg in the last one week despite the central government's measures to boost supply and contain price rise.

The rates stood at Rs 55/kg on October 1, as per the official data. Onion prices are ruling high for more than a month in Delhi-NCR due to supply disruption following heavy rains in growing states like Maharashtra.

There has been almost three-fold jump in onion prices from the year-ago period. Onions were sold at Rs 30-35/kg in retail markets in Nov. 2018. Not only in Delhi, onion prices are ruling high in most of the consuming areas across the country. However, in the national capital, onion has been a "politically sensitive" commodity.

"The prices should moderate in the coming days as the arrival of fresh crop has begun in Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Karnataka. But untimely rain has affected transportation to the consuming areas," a senior official in the consumer affairs ministry said.

In Delhi, the availability of onion is being improved from the central buffer stock handled by National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India.

The buffer stock has been given to Mother Dairy for retailing at Rs 24.90/kg through its 400-odd Safal outlets to provide relief to consumers, he said.

However, some of the Safal outlets are running out of stock and poor consumers are returning with disappointment. "I waited for two hours in the queue to buy onions from Safal but when my turn came the stock got over," said a housemaid Mumtaz who was waiting outside the Safal outlet at Jangpura Extension. In some localities, customers of a particular colony are requesting the Safal owners not to sell onionsto outsiders.

The government has decided to facilitate private imports from Afghanistan, Egypt, Turkey and Iran and even liberalise phytosanitary and fumigation norms.

Private traders have informed the government that 80 containers of imported onions have reached Indian ports, and 100 containers are in high seas and can be diverted to India, the official said.