The country recorded a large increase in rice imports in the first eight months this year compared to the same period last year, the statistics agency said, as South-East Asia’s biggest economy seeks to boost stocks of its staple commodity.
Global rice prices rose to a 15-year high last week after top producer India’s decision in July to ban exports of non-basmati rice, citing several factors including soaring domestic prices and “extreme climatic conditions”.
Indonesia imported 1.59 million tonnes of rice from January to August this year, Statistics Indonesia head Amalia Adininggar Widyasanti said, while more than 429,000 tonnes of rice were imported for the whole of 2022.
“Rice imports from January and August 2023 experienced quite a high increase compared to the same period last year,” Widyasanti told reporters, without disclosing the import figure for the same period last year.
Most rice imports came from South-East Asian neighbours, with Thailand sending 802,000 tons and Vietnam exporting 674,000 tonnes of the commodity over the period.
The government had set an import quota of 2.3 million tonnes of rice this year to maintain price stability because of expected disruption to rice production caused by the El Nino weather pattern.
But the rice imports were complicated by import restriction measures taken by other countries including India, President Joko Widodo said on Friday.
“We want to strengthen our strategic reserve of rice, but even importing it is difficult, unlike in the past,” he said in a speech.
On Thursday, Jokowi ordered state-owned logistics company Bulog to release its reserve stocks to the market in order to bring down rice prices.
The nationwide rice price averaged 14,490 rupiah (RM4.40) as of Friday, an increase of around 16% compared to the same period last year, according to data from the National Food Agency. — AFP