India’s palm oil demand is recovering on price competitiveness just as Indonesia and Malaysia signal tighter supply, supporting firm prices ahead.
Prices & Trade Flows
India’s palm oil imports are projected to grow by around 3% in MY 2026/27 after sliding to a 15‑year low of 7.1 MMT in the current year, as weaker Indonesian benchmark prices restore palm’s traditional discount to soybean and sunflower oils. Domestically, total palm oil supply is expected to reach about 11.1 MMT, of which roughly 9.0 MMT will be imported and only 0.3 MMT produced locally, underscoring India’s dependence on international prices and policies.
On the policy side, India continues to support higher import volumes through reduced duties on crude edible oils, while maintaining a tariff‑value system that currently pegs crude palm oil at about USD 1,066/ton CIF for customs purposes . This anchors landed values and helps keep palm oil competitive versus alternative oils, especially as domestic soybean oil production falls and rapeseed oil is increasingly absorbed by local food demand.
Supply & Demand Balance
India’s total vegetable oil production in 2026/27 is forecast at 9.5 MMT, only slightly above the current year, even as oilseed production edges lower. Palm oil remains a small domestic crop at around 305 TMT, with area stagnant near 129,000 hectares and meaningful supply growth not expected before 2028. As a result, palm oil’s role is overwhelmingly import‑driven, providing roughly one‑third of India’s usable edible oil pool.
On the demand side, palm oil food use in India is forecast to climb to about 8.6 MMT, up from 8.4 MMT in 2025/26, supported by its value positioning in the bulk industrial and low‑income retail segments. Total domestic palm oil consumption (including industrial use) is projected around 9.25 MMT. This growth comes even as soybean oil usage also rises on cheaper imports, while sunflower oil loses share amid supply constraints and higher relative prices from the Black Sea region.
Global Fundamentals & Policy Drivers
Globally, Indonesia and Malaysia remain the critical swing suppliers shaping India’s palm oil import costs. Indonesian palm oil exports and derivatives reached about USD 4.69 billion in the first two months of 2026, up sharply year‑on‑year, indicating robust production and strong external demand . At the same time, Jakarta has increased the crude palm oil export levy to 12.5% of the reference price and is pressing ahead with higher biodiesel blend targets (B40 and moves toward B50), which absorb more domestic CPO and tend to lift global prices .
Malaysia faces the opposite dynamic: heavy rains and flooding in Sabah have recently driven the steepest monthly output drop in more than a year, tightening nearby supply and supporting benchmark futures on Bursa Malaysia . Research houses have nudged up their 2026 average CPO price forecasts, citing both weather‑related constraints and stronger demand for vegetable oils from global biofuel mandates . For India, this means that although palm oil retains a discount to soyoil, the global cost base is drifting higher, limiting scope for a sustained price collapse.
Weather & Short-Term Outlook
Current forecasts point to generally adequate rainfall across key Southeast Asian palm regions into early April, but after recent flooding in parts of Malaysia any renewed heavy precipitation could further disrupt harvesting and logistics. In Indonesia, no acute nationwide weather shock is evident, yet policy‑driven diversion of CPO into biodiesel remains the larger structural risk to export availability . For India, internal weather has little direct impact on palm oil supply due to the small domestic crop; monsoon conditions matter mainly via competing oils and feedstocks, not palm itself.
Trading & Risk Management View
- Importers (refiners, vanaspati manufacturers): Use current relative palm discount versus soybean oil to extend coverage modestly into Q2–Q3 2026, but avoid over‑hedging beyond 3–4 months given policy volatility in Indonesia and biodiesel‑linked demand swings.
- Food manufacturers & HORECA buyers: Prioritise palm‑based blends to manage input inflation, while keeping a small share of soybean/sunflower oil to hedge against potential palm‑specific supply shocks from Malaysia.
- Speculative participants: Bias mildly long on CPO futures or India‑linked palm spreads, as Indonesian biodiesel ambitions, higher export levies and Malaysian weather risks collectively argue for a supported price band rather than a deep retracement.
- Risk watch: Monitor Indonesian export levy changes, further increases in biodiesel mandates, and any escalation of Middle East tensions that could raise energy prices and, by extension, biofuel‑driven vegetable oil demand.