•  
  • Welcome Guest!
  • |
  • Members Log In Close Panel
  •  
Home
 
  • Home
  • About us
  • Ethanol
  • Cogeneration
  • Environmental
  • Statistics
  • Distillery
  • Sugar Price
  • Sugar Process
  • Contact us

News


Unpaid `20k cr bills do not deter cane growers
Date: 06 May 2015
Source: DNA
Reporter: Pratik Parija & Prabhudatta Mishra
News ID: 4309
Pdf:
Nlink:

New Delhi: Sugar production in India will probably exceed demand for a sixth year as farmers maintain plantings in spite of the $3.2 billion they’re owed by mills.

Output in the 12 months starting October 1 may match the 28 million tonne (mt) estimated for this year, according to the National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories Ltd. The crop

was planted on 3.9 million hectares as of April 22, almost the same as 4 million hectares a year earlier,

government data show.

The largest producer after Brazil is poised for another bumper year as prices set by state governments make sugar one of the most profitable crops for farmers. Mills are racking up debt to the growers as the price they sell to the local market doesn’t cover their raw material costs, the Indian Sugar Mills

Association says. As the government announces steps to help mills clear their debt, farmers are sticking with the crop.

“Cane is just like a hen that lays golden eggs,” said Dhanbir Shastri, a farmer from Rasoolpur village in Uttar Pradesh, the biggest cane-growing state. “There’s no alternative to sugar, as the return from rice or potatoes doesn’t even cover the cost of production. We are sure that arrears will be cleared with government help.”

While Shastri has yet to be paid about Rs 125,000 by a mill for this year’s crop, he recently received

the money owed to him for the previous harvest. That helped the 61-year-old farmer plant cane on half of his four-acre farm.

Bajaj Hindusthan Sugar Ltd, Balrampur Chini Mills Ltd and Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd have reported losses for at least three straight quarters as states fix cane rates to help farmers.

Mills nationwide owe growers Rs 20,100 crore, according to official data.

The gap between raw material costs and sugar prices threatens the financial status of mills and will turn India into a producer with a structural surplus, said Tom McNeill, a director at Brisbane, Australia-based Green Pool Commodity Specialists Pty. The government will have to continue to support

the industry with tax-payer money, said McNeill, who has studied the commodity for more than two decades and was the head of analysis at Kingsman SA.

“Cane now pays better than any other crop, because the government continues to raise the price every year, ignoring what the market is doing,” McNeill said. “The question many are asking is why not align cane prices with market returns rather than allow the government to set them.”

Prices in New York have fallen in the past four years, the longest stretch of declines since at least 1962, and touched 11.91 cents a pound on March 31, the lowest since January 2009.

Futures were at 12.56 cents on ICE Futures US on Tuesday. Refined sugar prices fell as much as 0.6% to Rs 2,409 per 100 kg on the National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange in Mumbai, the lowest since April 21.

Global production in the 12 months ending September 30 will exceed demand by 620,000 tonne.

Higher cane costs mean sugar prices in India are above global rates, making exports uneconomical even with a government subsidy of Rs 4,000 a tonne, according to the mills association. The government has announced interest-free loans and increased import duties to boost prices and help mills clear the debt to farmers. “We hope the government will continue to support farmers and the industry,” said M G Joshi, MD of the cooperative federation, which represents mills producing 48% of the country’s sugar. —Bloomberg              

 
  

Navigation

  • TV Interviews
  • Application Form For Associate Membership
  • Terms & Conditions (Associate Member)
  • ISMA President
  • Org. Structure
  • Associate Members(Regional Association)
  • Who Could be Member?
  • ISMA Committee
  • Past Presidents
  • New Developments
  • Publications
  • Acts & Orders
  • Landmark Cases
  • Forthcoming Events




Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA) © 2010 Privacy policy
Legal Terms & Disclaimer
 Maintained by