HomeNewsBusinessWhy chilli peppers are red hot despite a rise in output

Why chilli peppers are red hot despite a rise in output

Spices Board estimates production to be 7 percent higher but sustained domestic and international demand and low inventory have kept prices high

June 16, 2023 / 12:59 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Despite the cold storages in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka getting filled up to 80 percent capacity, traders are not expecting a fall in prices. (Representative Image)
Despite the cold storages in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka getting filled up to 80 percent capacity, traders are not expecting a fall in prices. (Representative Image)

Higher production has not reined in soaring red chilli prices in the country amid rising demand and scant carryover stock.

Average red chilli prices currently range from Rs 200 to 250 per kg with some varieties like low-heat high-colour Bydagi going at a historic high of over Rs 600 per kg. Last year too, prices of this much-exported spice had raced to such heights spurred by a shortfall, but later stabilised around Rs 200 per kg.

Story continues below Advertisement

Spices Board figures peg the country’s red chill production at 1,957,635 tonnes in 2022-23, an increase of about 7 percent over 1,836,222 tonnes of the previous year. However, a section of traders and exporters feel the production could be almost equal to the previous year.

“The production is equal to supply now and arrivals coming to the market are getting sold as there is a good export demand from countries like China, Bangladesh and Thailand, apart from domestic buying. Besides robust demand, the marginal carryover stock from last year has also caused the prices to remain at a high level,” said Gopal Jamili, MD of Jamili Sarangapani & Co. in Guntur, the hub of red chilli trade in the country.