Karnataka CM writes to PM Modi for MSP as maize, green gram rates crash
Siddaramaiah urged urgent MSP procurement as maize and green gram prices in Karnataka have plunged far below Centre-fixed rates.
PTI
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CM Siddaramaiah alleged that many ethanol plants are sourcing maize from middlemen instead of farmers (Facebook)
Bengaluru, 22 Nov
Pointing to the crash of procurement price of maize and green gram in the State, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi to direct national agencies like NAFED, FCI and NCCF to purchase these grains at MSP to protect the interests of farmers.
In a letter to Modi, Siddaramaiah said, “I write to you with deep concern and a sense of urgency regarding the severe price crash in Maize and Green Gram (Moong), crops that sustain the livelihoods of lakhs of farmers in the state. The market prices have fallen far below the Minimum Support Price (MSP) declared by the Government of India, creating widespread distress among cultivators.”
Siddaramaiah said the State has cultivated maize in over 17.94 lakh hectares and green gram in over 4.16 lakh hectares this Kharif season, and the State is tentatively expecting a production of more than 54.74 lakh metric tonnes of Maize and 1.983 lakh metric tonnes of Green Gram.
Though this should have been an opportunity for prosperity, the current market conditions have turned it into a crisis, he noted.
He pointed out that while the Centre fixed MSP at Rs 2,400 per MT for maize and Rs 28,768 per MT for green gram, the prevailing prices in Karnataka have dropped to Rs 1,600 to Rs 1,800 per MT for maize and around Rs 5,400 per MT for green gram.
Even the modal prices of the last three years were higher than MSP, but external pressures and supply-demand distortions have pushed prices to record lows, he said.
According to CM, Karnataka has a marketable surplus of 32 lakh metric tonne (LMT) of maize, far exceeding the absorptive capacity of local industries. Siddaramaiah urged Modi to direct NAFED, FCI and NCCF to begin MSP procurement immediately under the Price Support Scheme or another suitable mechanism.
He also sought measures to ensure Karnataka’s farmers benefit fairly from the ethanol supply chain, pointing out that the basic rate for maize-based ethanol is Rs 266.07 per litre with an added incentive of Rs 5.79 per litre.
The CM alleged that many ethanol plants are sourcing maize from middlemen instead of farmers.
In response, Union Minister for Food and Public Distribution and Consumer Affairs, Pralhad Joshi, asked the CM why his government did not direct distilleries in the State to purchase maize at the support price fixed by the Centre.
The power to enforce local procurement norms rests with the State, Joshi said, adding if distilleries are buying below MSP, it is due to the absence of suitable directions from State government.
He also called that the claim of 70 LMT maize imports by the Centre a “lie”.




