Farmers rally in New Delhi against US trade concessions

Sri Lanka Guardian | 10 March 2026

Farmers rally in New Delhi against US trade concessions

Hundreds of farmers and industrial workers gathered in India’s capital on
Monday to protest what they described as government concessions to the
United States in ongoing trade discussions and to demand a law guaranteeing
minimum prices for crops. The demonstration took place near the historic
Jantar Mantar observatory, close to the parliamentary complex in New Delhi,
where protesters voiced concerns about trade policies and the economic
pressures facing India’s agricultural sector.

The rally followed a nationwide agitation earlier last month and comes at a
time when farmers are already grappling with rising production costs. Energy
prices have surged due to tensions and conflict in the Middle East, adding to
the financial burden on growers who depend heavily on diesel-powered
equipment such as irrigation pumps and threshers. Demonstrators traveled
from neighboring states early in the morning to attend the gathering, with
many shielding themselves from the heat while calling for policy changes.

One of the main grievances raised by the protesters relates to India’s
agreement to allow imports of distillers dried grains with solubles, commonly
known as DDGS. The ethanol byproduct is used in animal feed and in the
United States is largely produced from genetically modified corn. Farmers
argue that allowing such imports could undermine domestic producers and
place additional pressure on local agricultural markets.

Protesters also warned that any move by India to reduce import duties on
soybean oil would make American supplies more competitive in the country’s
market. India is the world’s largest buyer of vegetable oil, and farmers fear
that cheaper imports could damage the livelihoods of local oilseed producers.
Some demonstrators directly criticized the government of Narendra Modi,
accusing it of prioritizing international trade deals over the interests of
domestic farmers. A grain farmer from the northern state of Haryana said that
allowing agricultural imports at zero duty would severely harm local
producers and called for the proposed trade agreement to be canceled.

The rally also revived a long-standing demand for a legal guarantee of
minimum support prices for crops. Farmers argue that such a law would
protect them from volatile markets and rising input costs. Currently, the
government announces assured floor prices for about two dozen crops, but
procurement largely takes place only in a few states where the Food
Corporation of India and other state-run agencies purchase mainly wheat and
rice for national welfare programs.

Those programs supply free grain to roughly 800 million people each month,
making government procurement a critical pillar of India’s food security
system. However, in many regions where official buying is limited or absent,
market prices can drop sharply during harvest seasons, leaving farmers with
little protection against sudden declines in income.

The issue has remained unresolved since a major wave of farmer protests in
2021. At that time, farmers ended a year-long agitation after the Modi
administration repealed three controversial agricultural reform laws and
promised to consider legal backing for minimum support prices. Farmers say
progress toward that promise has been slow.

Participants in Monday’s demonstration warned that without stronger
protections, rural livelihoods would remain under threat. Many argued that a
legal guarantee for minimum prices across all crops is necessary to ensure
stable incomes and safeguard the future of farming communities across the
country.


  Fuente: Sri Lanka Guardian