India’s edible oil imports are shifting from price-led buying to supply-driven sourcing as geopolitical tensions in West Asia combine with climate shocks and energy market volatility, according to the Indian Vegetable Oil Producers’ Association (IVPA).
Speaking at the 24th International Conference Black Sea Grain.Kyiv-2026, IVPA Vice President Bhavna Shah said three forces will shape the sector in 2026–27: weak monsoons, high crude oil prices, and strong global biofuel demand tightening edible oil availability. “The overall bias remains slightly bullish as India stays stable, supported by efficient supply chains, smart imports, and policy interventions,” she noted.
Shah cautioned that edible oil inflation could inch up due to crude volatility, fertiliser shortages, gas-linked production constraints, and biofuel mandates tightening palm oil supply. Yet India’s role as a “sink” for global surpluses will cushion the impact. “India remains a prime destination for any surpluses wherever in the world they exist,” she said.
Imports have been range-bound at 15–17 million tonnes, with March 2026 imports up 11% year-on-year to 1.19 million tonnes, though the two-month average dipped 12% on high prices. For oil year 2025–26, imports are projected at 16.5 million tonnes against domestic output of 9.6 million tonnes.
On composition, Shah said sunflower oil demand will hold resilient, soybean oil shipments may face delays due to Argentina supply disruptions, and palm oil will dominate the basket thanks to cost advantages. Post-April 2026, soybean and palm oil will compete for India’s share, with Chinese soybean oil making a notable entry.
India, which relies on imports for about 60% of its edible oil consumption, remains the largest structural demand hub globally. Shah stressed that edible oils must be viewed through the lens of food, feed, and fuel, as rising biofuel linkages mean fuel price rallies now trigger synchronous increases in edible oil prices.
She highlighted government efforts toward self-reliance, including national missions on oil palm and oilseeds, MSP enhancement, and diversification strategies backed by $2.5 billion in commitments. “A maturing policy outlay will dictate import patterns and price trajectories ahead amid ongoing geopolitical tensions,” she said, adding that India has acted decisively to secure supplies, contain inflation, and ensure stability.
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