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Cooking Up Relief: India Chops Edible Oil Taxes and Extends Duty-Free Pulse Imports


Updated: June 08, 2025 22:57

Image Source: DD News
In the bold step to control food inflation and enhance domestic supply, the Indian government has introduced two key policy initiatives: a steep cut in customs duty on crude edible oils and a duty-free import of yellow peas up to March 2026.
 
Key Announcements:
 
Half Customs Duty on Crude Edible Oils:
The basic customs duty on import of crude palm oil, soybean oil, and sunflower oil has been reduced from 20% to 10%. With additional charges (Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess and Social Welfare Surcharge), the effective rate of import duty reduces from 27.5% to 16.5%.
 
Broader Duty Differential:
The crude to refined edible oil duty gap has also increased to 19.25% from 8.75%. This will definitely boost importation of crude oils as opposed to refined oils in favor of local processors and refiners.
 
Price Relief Needed Now:
The edible oil industry has been instructed by the government to transfer the advantage of the duty reduction to the consumer immediately. Prices at the retail level are likely to reduce in the weeks ahead with inventories cleared imported at higher duties.
 
Imports of Duty-Free Yellow Peas Increased:
The duty-free import window of yellow peas, which is one of the key pulses, has been widened from May 2025 to March 31, 2026. Imports are exempt from minimum import price and port restrictions, subject to online registration.
 
Boost to Domestic Supply and Price Stability:
These steps are intended to stabilize the prices of edible oils and pulses to consumers' advantage and provide a consistent supply in the face of international price volatility. India, which gets more than 70% of its edible oil requirements through imports, will import more from key suppliers of Indonesia, Malaysia, Argentina, and Ukraine.
 
Industry and Consumer Impact:
Local processors and refiners will benefit from the broader duty differential that will render refinery in the domestic market competitive.
 
Retail customers are likely to pay lower prices for cooking oil and pulses, which comes as relief after recent increases. Yellow pea import duty-free status expansion will have a tendency to make pulse prices stabilize, with yellow peas representing almost half of India's 2024 pulse imports. "This is a win-win scenario for vegetable oil processors and consumers alike with the duty reduction resulting in reduced domestic prices," said B.V. Mehta, executive director, Oilseeds Association of India. 
 
Source: CNBC-TV18, Economic Times BrandEquity, Rediff Money, UkrAgroConsult, Business Standard, Daily Excelsior, Economic Times

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