New Delhi: Sitting on a foodgrain stock that is almost two times the required level, the government Friday said the reserves in the FCI godowns across the country have been "kept safe" ahead of monsoon.
Food Minister Ram Vilas Paswan, who reviewed the functioning of the Food Corporation of India (FCI), also said its officials have been directed to speed up the construction of modern silos with a capacity to store 10 million tonnes of foodgrain.
The government's grain inventory has built up due to record production and procurement in the last few years. The reserves with the FCI are about twice the required level of 41.1 million tonnes, as on June 1.
Read | Rahul, Priyanka express shock over killing of Aligarh child
Southwest monsoon has been delayed and is expected to hit Kerala in the next couple of days.
Asked if the government has taken measures to handle overflowing godowns during monsoon, Paswan said: "The foodgrain procured by the FCI is not kept open. It is kept safely in the godowns."
Some quantity is kept in cover and plinth (CAP) storage and due care is taken to minimise the losses, he added.
Currently, the government has the capacity to store 85.15 million tonnes of foodgrains, against the requirement of 65 million tonnes. Of the total available storage, 12.6 million tonnes is CAP storage, as per official data.
The government has already procured over 76 million tonnes of rice and wheat so far this year and there is old stock lying in the godowns as well.
A food ministry official said, "The total foodgrains stock was almost two times higher than the required level of 41.1 million tonnes as on June 1."
To offload surplus stock, the FCI has decided to sell 10 million tonnes of wheat to bulk consumers this fiscal, over 40 per cent more than the previous year, he said, adding that other steps are also being taken to reduce the stock.