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The March palm oil exports of Indonesia have decreased due to rising local demand

The March palm oil exports of Indonesia have decreased due to rising local demand

The exports of crude palm oil and refined palm oils from Indonesia fell by nearly 2% between February and March, as the local consumption increased due to Ramadan. However, shipments for March were the highest they have been in the last four years.

The lower stocks will be supported by the higher exports from Indonesia this year, the largest producer of tropical oil in the world. Prices that were trading at premiums for the past few months have now started to trade at a discount.

The statistics bureau reported that Indonesia exported 2,002 tons of crude palm oil and refined palm oils in March, a slight decrease from 2,006 tons the month before. Exports are still up 13% since March 2024.

The data revealed that March's shipments totaled $2.19 billion compared to February's $2.27 million.

The data of the bureau exclude palm kernel oil and biodiesel. GAPKI, the Indonesian palm oil association, releases its own data later. This includes more products. The export figures are also different.

The consumption of palm oil in Indonesia, which is the largest Muslim majority nation on earth, usually increases during Ramadan.

Anilkumar bagani, the research head at Mumbai-based Sunvin Group, who deals in vegetable oils, says that there was no significant decline in Indonesian exports because palm oil prices were still attractive for buyers when compared with Malaysian offerings.

He said that April exports were expected to be higher due to the strong purchasing by India and other Asian countries.

Palm oil is mainly competing with supplies of soyoil, sunflower oil, and Argentina, Brazil, Russia and Ukraine.

"Palm Oil has started to trade at a discounted price in comparison with soyoil." This should boost exports over the next few months when production is expected to increase," said a New Delhi-based dealer at a global trading house.

The dealer stated that despite lower exports, inventories of palm oil in Indonesia could have decreased due to lower production during the Ramadan holiday and increased consumption as a result of the country's implementation a mandatory 40% biodiesel mix.

(source: Reuters)