CHANA
Introduction
Light-brown beans with a nutty flavour belonging to the chickpea family.
Chickpeas, sometimes also known as garbanzo beans, are believed to have
originated in North Africa, the Middle East and India. They are a
spring-seeded, annual legume that needs no nitrogen fertilizer. They have
excellent drought tolerance due to their two to six foot long tap root.
Chickpeas have indeterminate growth which means they continue flowering
until stress such as drought or frost stops growth and begins pod-set.
Chickpeas are well adapted to the drier parts of the brown and dark brown
soil zones of the Prairies. They do not tolerate poorly drained or saline
soils.
Types of Chana
- Desi - main type grown in India. Desi types are
small-seeded varieties requiring 95 to 105 days to mature on the
Prairies. They make up 85 to 90 per cent of world chickpea
production.
- Kabuli - Kabuli types are large-seeded varieties that
require 100 to 110 days to reach maturity. Kabulis only make up 10%
to 15% of world production.
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Chana Producing Countries
- Desi
- India
- Pakistan
- Burma
- Bangladesh
- Australia
|
- Kabuli
- Turkey
- Syria
- Iran
- Mexico
- Ethiopia
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Note: Canada produces both, Desi and Kabuli.
Features
- Desi - Desis are usually split and may be substituted for
green or yellow peas. They may also be milled into flour. On the
Indian subcontinent, where desis are used, they are served in may
ways. The whole seed is boiled, roasted, pureed, puffed or
sugar-coated. Split chickpeas are mashed, pureed, fried, curried and
used in sweet fillings. Chickpea flour is used for pancakes,
breading, thickeners, or fried noodles.
- Kabuli - Kabuli seeds have a cream to white-colored hull
and are, ideally, 8 to 10 mm. (5/16 to 3/8 inch) in diameter. The
seeds are sold whole for use in soups and salads or ground into
flour.
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Major Trading Centres
- Desi
- Madhya Pradesh - Indore, Bhopal and Vidisha.
- Maharashtra - Jalgaon, Latur, Mumbai and Akola.
- Rajasthan - Jaipur, Bikaner, Kota, Jodhpur, Sriganaganagar
and Hanumangarh.
- Other major centers are are Delhi, Chennai, Kanpur, Hapur,
Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Gulbarga, Sirsa, Jalandhar, Ludhiana,
Sangrur
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Sowing Period: October and
November
Harvesting Period: March and April
Note: Chickpeas are generally grown without irrigation.
Export, Import and Price
- World exports during the past 10 years were variable, but
trending upwards. Exports ranged from a low of 313,000 tonnes (t) in
calendar year 1995 to a high of 993,000 t in 2001.
- In 2002, the latest year for which orld trade statistics are
available, exports were 743,000 t.
- There are currently only four significant exporters of chickpeas
- Turkey, Australia, Mexico and Syria.
- The U.S. is the fifth largest exporter but that country imports
much, much more, mainly kabulis, than it exports.
- India is the largest importer of chickpeas. India accounts for
over 30% of all imports, almost all desis. Pakistan, Spain, and
Bangladesh are the other three major importers.
- India and surrounding countries import mainly the desi type,
while countries in North and South America, Europe, the Middle East
and Africa import mainly the kabuli type.
- The price difference between desis and kabulis is partly related
to the end user market. Kabulis tend to be used in relatively more
affluent countries. Desis are primarily consumed on the Indian
sub-continent where purchasing power isn't as great. Desi prices
generally track edible yellow pea prices but at a considerable
premium.
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World Production
- During the past 10 years, world production has been variable.
- 6.6 million tonnes (Mt) in 2000-2001
- 9.5 Mt in 1998-1999
India accounted for 60-70% of world production during this period.
Production in India was variable, which was the main reason for the large
range in world production.
On average, world production consisted of about 75% desi type and 25%
kabuli type. Production of the kabuli type is more dispersed and therefore
less variable than for the desi type.
World Chana Supply and Disposition
| World
Chickpea Supply and Disposition |
| |
2000-01 |
2001-02 |
2002-03 |
2003-04 |
| Harvested Area
(kha) |
9,200 |
10,700 |
9,800 |
10,600 |
| Average Yields
(t/ha) |
0.72 |
0.79 |
0.82 |
0.77 |
| Carry-in
Stocks |
400 |
100 |
400 |
100 |
| Country |
Production
(thousand tonnes.) |
| India |
3,850 |
5,470 |
4,130 |
5,770 |
| Pakistan |
565 |
397 |
362 |
672 |
| Turkey |
548 |
535 |
650 |
600 |
| Iran |
160 |
269 |
290 |
255 |
| Myanmar |
84 |
119 |
194 |
200 |
| Ethiopia |
176 |
176 |
180 |
180 |
| Mexico |
234 |
326 |
235 |
240 |
| Australia |
150 |
258 |
136 |
178 |
| Syria |
65 |
60 |
89 |
87 |
| Spain |
46 |
53 |
73 |
65 |
| Canada |
388 |
455 |
156 |
68 |
| United States |
59 |
73 |
38 |
20 |
| Others |
290 |
304 |
337 |
325 |
| Total Production |
6,615 |
8,495 |
6,870 |
8,660 |
| Total Kabuli Production |
1,940 |
2,220 |
2,020 |
1,810 |
| Total Desi Production |
4,675 |
6,275 |
4,850 |
6,850 |
| Total Supply |
7,015 |
8,595 |
7,270 |
8,760 |
| Total Use |
6,915 |
8,195 |
7,170 |
8,380 |
| Carry-out Stocks |
100 |
400 |
100 |
400 |
| Stocks-to-use Ratio (%) |
1 |
5 |
1 |
5 |