Cooking oil to turn cheaper as Centre halves customs duty on imports
By IANS | Updated: May 31, 2025 14:18 IST2025-05-31T14:14:35+5:302025-05-31T14:18:10+5:30
New Delhi, May 31 The government has halved the basic customs duty on crude palm oil, crude soyabean ...

Cooking oil to turn cheaper as Centre halves customs duty on imports
New Delhi, May 31 The government has halved the basic customs duty on crude palm oil, crude soyabean oil and crude sunflower oil from 20 per cent to 10 per cent to bring down prices of cooking oils in the local market and ease the strain on household budgets.
The reduction in customs duty has kicked in with immediate effect as the government wants to lower edible oil prices which had risen by as much as 17.4 per cent in April at time when the retail inflation has been declining.
The move is also expected to benefit domestic oil processing industries as it reduces raw material costs for them.
With the 10 per cent duty cut, the total import duty on the three oils will effectively come down to 16.5 per cent from 27.5 per cent.
In September 2024, the government imposed a 20 per cent basic customs duty on crude and refined vegetable oils. After the revision, crude palm oil, crude soyoil, and crude sunflower oil attracted a 27.5 per cent import duty, compared to 5.5 per cent previously, while 35.75 per cent customs duty is levied on refined grades of the three oils.
India's edible oil imports are estimated to be around 15-16 million tonnes annually. This represents a major chunk of the country’s overall edible oil consumption, estimated to be between 23 and 25 million tonnes.
While India imports palm oil from Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, soyoil and sunflower oil are imported from Argentina, Brazil, Russia and Ukraine.
The Centre is keeping a close watch on inflation and on Thursday announced the imposition of stock limits on wheat applicable to wholesale traders and retailers across the country to prevent hoarding and speculation that drives up inflation.
The order imposes a limit of wholesale traders is 3,000 metric tonnes (MT) on the wheat stock that wholesale traders are allowed to keep. For retail traders the stock limit has been fixed at 10 MT, .
For bid chain retailers the stock limit is up to 10 MT for each retail outlet subject to maximum quantity of (10 multiplied by total no. of outlets) MT. This will be the maximum stock that can be held at all their retail outlets and depots put together.
In the case of processors the stock limit for wheat has been fixed at 70 per cent of the monthly installed capacity multiplied by the remaining months of FY 2025-26.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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