• Mon. Apr 29th, 2024

Tomato Price in Chennai Touches Rs 170 per kg

Tomato Price in Chennai Touches Rs 170 per kgTomato Price in Chennai Touches Rs 170 per kg

Chennai: With a reduction in the number of tomatoes arriving in Chennai’s Koyambedu market, South India’s largest vegetable market, the price of tomatoes has touched Rs 170 per kilogram here and outskirts in the retail market and the rain in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka are being held responsible for this.

In the wholesale market, the price ranges from Rs 120 to Rs 130 per kilogram.

R.K. Kuppusamy, a wholesale trader of tomatoes and potatoes in the Koyambedu market told media that generally 800 tonnes of tomato load reaches the market on alternate days and now this has sharply come down to 250 tonnes.

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The reduced arrival of tomatoes, according to the merchants, is due to the destruction of crops in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh due to heavy rain for the past few weeks in the two states.

The consumption of tomatoes has also reduced as people prefer to shy away from the vegetable due to the high prices.

Sheeba, a housewife in Ashok Nagar while speaking to the media said, “We have cut short tomatoes from our vegetable pack. If we feel like buying, we buy for Rs 50 and the purchase of 1 kg of tomatoes is from the good old days.”

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Several traders also shared their predicament due to the rising prices of the vegetable and the corresponding reduction in the purchase of the vegetable.

Seethanath, a vegetable trader from Teynampet while speaking to the media said, “It is very difficult for the retail businessmen to survive in this market. Tomato prices are oscillating and we have difficulties in selling the product. I don’t know how to move ahead as most families have stopped buying it.”

Across Tamil Nadu, the tomato has turned costlier with the advent of rain in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, where the vegetable is cultivated in large quantities.

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The Tamil Nadu government had started selling tomatoes at Rs 60 per kg through Public Distribution System (PDS) shops. However, consumers said that the quality of the tomatoes was poor and that most who wanted to buy tomatoes depended upon the public market.

G. Manonamani, a housewife at Adayar in Chennai while speaking to the media said, “The price of tomatoes has touched high and the government intervened by selling tomatoes through PDS shops. I am very sorry to say that it was better for the government not to sell tomatoes as the quality of the product is too bad and we still prefer to buy from retail markets even though the price is on the higher side.”

The traders are also worried that the soaring price of tomatoes would take away the consumers from the vegetable. The continuing rain in Andhra and Karnataka is a major problem that haunts the traders as the volume of tomatoes that were coming to Kerala has dipped and this would continue in the coming few weeks if the product is not available in cultivating areas.

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R . Najimuddeen, a wholesale trader in the Koyambedu market while speaking to the media said, “We feel that with continuing crop loss in Karnataka and Andhra where tomato farming is extensively done, the market prices of tomatoes is likely to increase creating immense difficulties for both the traders and the consumers.”


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