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Ancient
spice trade takes e-route
By Raja M
In
80 BC, when the Egyptian city of Alexandria became the busiest
commercial center on Earth, its bazaars were stocked with Indian spices
en route to markets in Greece and the Roman Empire. Later Columbus and
Vasco da Gama set sail for India through different routes. The ancient
traders will probably be baffled by the parks and electronic gadgets
that are being used for trading in spices. However, the new method is
more transparent and beneficial to the farmer.
If the
ghosts of Christopher Columbus and Vasco da Gama continue craving for
new sea routes to India's fabulous spices, they won't need a ship to
ride across the unknown: they can spiritedly log on to e-auctions
launched last month by India's Commerce Ministry, as part of efforts to
regain the country's global primacy in cardamom.
The
electronic auction is expected to help farmers and small traders by
increasing transparency in transactions in the cardamom trade and snuff
out cartels and auction riggers. Cardamom, called the "queen of spices",
is the world's third-most-expensive spice after vanilla and saffron,
averaging US$10 per kilogram at auction rates.
As in
earlier millennia, India is the world's largest spice producer,
accounting for 44% of global output and 36% of global trade. "India is
the world's biggest producer, consumer and exporter of spices," says V J
Kurien, chairman of the apex Spices Board of India.
Based in
the southern city of Cochin and functioning under the Ministry of
Commerce, the Spices Board of India website announces that it achieved
an "all-time high" in spice-export revenue for 2005-06, but since then
India's spice trade is facing challenges with production problems at
home and new competitors abroad. Any makeover is welcome.
According
to Spices Board data, India's exports in April-July climbed 29% in
volume to 152,650 tonnes, thanks largely to better demand for fenugreek
and chili. "Exports are expected to clock 380,000 tonnes in 2007-08,
worth $875 million, and reach $1 billion by 2008-09," said Kurien.
India is
also setting up five exclusive "spice parks" to facilitate export
quality control, with four in the south and a spice park for mint in
Lucknow, the capital of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh. The spice
parks will offer land within the complex to private entrepreneurs to
establish processing units, from which spices will be directly exported.
"By 2017, we would like India to be the only processing hub for spice in
the world," said Kurien.
Both the
e-auctions and spice parks are appearing for first time in the world's
spice trade. India's 40,000 cardamom farmers registered with the Spices
Board will also each get an identity card before December 31, promised
the Commerce Ministry.
India's
new spice drive echoes earliest recorded history, when cardamom, black
pepper, chili, clove and coriander were among India's most wanted
exports. In 80 BC, when the Egyptian city of Alexandria became the
busiest commercial center on Earth, its bazaars were stocked with Indian
spices en route to markets in Greece and the Roman Empire. The
Archeology Department
of India
has reported finding 100,000 Roman coins in the Cauvery River delta,
southern India, along the old spice trade route.
In the
15th century, Columbus and Portuguese seaman Vasco da Gama set sail in
opposite directions to chart a new sea route to India for its spices and
silk. While the American continent got in the way of Columbus, who
thought he had reached India, da Gama landed on India's western Malabar
Coast in May 1498, and set about colonizing Goa, the Indian state that
Portugal
Would
hold for 450 years until 1961 when the Indian Army moved in. Goa will
host the ninth World Spice Congress next January, an event annually
organized by the Spices Board and the All India Spices Exporters Forum.
India was
the world's largest cardamom producer at the turn of this century, but
suffered production losses due to untimely weather conditions in key
growing areas. Prices and India's export share of cardamom dipped too,
with Guatemala recently accelerating its cultivation. Spices Board
chairman Kurien pointed to another aspect: "Our [domestic] consumption
of cardamom is so great that only 6% of our production is exported."
Saudi
Arabia (which popularly uses cardamom in gahwa - Arabian coffee) and
Japan are the biggest buyers of Indian cardamom, consuming 511 and 225
tonnes respectively during 2005-06. Malaysia ranks a distant third with
34 tonnes.
Cardamom,
indigenous to southern India and Sri Lanka, is a traditional
multipurpose spice used as everything from medicine to mouth freshener,
but primarily to flavor a wide range of Indian cuisine, from pulav to
kheer - the delicious rice pudding made with milk and dried fruits.
Cardamom
also features in traditional grandma remedies of the kind the Spices
Board website suggests as a cure for a sore throat: "Powder cardamom
seeds. Take a bit of cinnamon. Boil both spices in water. Add salt when
water comes to the boil. Filter this well, and use for gargling. Brings
instant relief to sore throats and prevents further infection." Cardamom
is also expected to bring relief to farmers through e-auctions. The
Tamil Nadu-based Cardamom Planters Association declared that better
prices and honest competition are assured with the identity of bidders
being kept secret. The e-auctions are also expected to reduce
administrative costs and documentation mistakes.
The weekly
cardamom e-auction system, developed with Indian software giant Tata
Consultancy Services, was launched in Bodinayakanur, Tamil Nadu, the
primary center for cardamom trade in India. Other major spice-auction
centers will go the same e-way, say Spices Board officials, after
Gauging how Bodinayakanur fares online. India's old spice trade is
wearing a new look. |