New Delhi | The government on Saturday withdrew 20 per cent export duty on onion effective from April 1 and said the move is aimed at protecting the interest of farmers.
A notification in this regard has been issued by the Department of Revenue following a communication from the Department of Consumer Affairs, an official statement said.
"The decision stands as another testament to the government's commitment to ensuring remunerative prices to farmers while maintaining affordability of onion to the consumers at this crucial juncture when both mandi and retail prices have softened following expected arrival of rabi crops in good quantities," the consumer affairs ministry said.
The export duty has been in place since September 2024. However, despite restrictions, total onion export reached 11.65 lakh tonnes till March 18 of the current fiscal year.
Monthly onion export quantity had picked up from 0.72 lakh tonne in September 2024 to 1.85 lakh tonne in January this year.
Onion prices have fallen in key growing states due to increase in the arrival of the rabi crop.
You may also like
After 9 months of wait, India's 1st Aadhaar recipient gets Ladki dues
ED seeks to quiz Vijayan daughter in payoffs case
HC gives Centre 2 weeks to file reply in Rahul citizenship case
1984 anti-Sikh riots: Key witness received threats in Tytler case, reveals former DSGMC Chairman
WHO warns of health crisis due to small pool of anti-fungal meds