Higher imports may help support benchmark Malaysian palm oil prices that in July hit their lowest level in nearly four years and are struggling to recover due to weak export demand.

Palm oil imports for the 2019/20 marketing year starting on November 1 will rise to 9.7 million tonnes, said Govindbhai Patel, managing director of trading firm GG Patel & Nikhil Research Company. The imports will rise as edible oil consumption is estimated to grow to a record 23.6 million tonnes.

Palm oil accounts for nearly two-thirds of India's total edible oil imports. India buys palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia, with its soyoil mainly imported from Argentina and Brazil. It purchases sunflower oil from Ukraine.

"Soybean oil imports may rise 3.4 million tonnes against previous year's 3.1 million tonnes due to a drop in domestic crop," Patel told a conference.

The country's soybean production is expected to drop 12.6 per cent from a year ago to 9 million tonnes as excessive rainfall damaged the crop in the top producing central state of Madhya Pradesh, he said.

Madhya Pradesh received 38 per cent more rainfall than the average since the start of four-month long monsoon season on June 1. India is likely to receive above-average monsoon rains in 2019 for the first time in six years as seasonal rainfall continues longer than expected.

Higher rainfall, although, could lift groundnut and cotton production and allow farmers to expand the area under winter-sown oilseed crops such as rapeseed, said Patel, who has been trading edible oil for more than four decades.

The South Asian country's total edible oil imports could rise to a record high of 15.6 million tonnes in 2019/20, up 3.8 per cent from a year earlier, Patel said.

India's sunflower oil imports in the new marketing year could rise to 2.5 million tonnes from 2.4 million tonnes estimated in the current year, he said.