For the sins of Pakistan and the European Union, which are found selling sugar in the world market with an official subsidy, India, where exports of two million tonnes in the season ending September have been mandated, has become a suspect in the eyes of some foreign agencies. They complain that New Delhi is lacing such sales with trade-distorting subsidies. Attempts by Global Sugar Alliance (GSA), to put India in the dock for promoting subsidised exports are wholly unwarranted since the Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA) is all for selling a portion of surplus production abroad without putting any subsidy burden on the government. It may be noted that while Brazil, Thailand and Australia are members of the GSA, India is not.
Finding no other stick to beat India with, GSA has taken exception to New Delhi agreeing in May to give growers Rs 55 ($0.82) directly for every tonne of cane to be sold to sugar factories during the current season. Growers, as a result, will be raising cane bills on factories after deducting the amount received from the government. Yes, there is scope for hair-splitting as to whether this amounts to a subsidy that will come to the industry’s aid to export sugar.
The fact remains that as sugar’s ex-factory realisation would not even pay for the cost of cane whose fair and remunerative price (FRP) is fixed by New Delhi and over and above which some states, most significantly the largest sugar producer Uttar Pradesh will put a hefty premium, unpaid cane bills exceeded Rs 220 billion at one stage this season. The phenomenon was adding to the groundswell of discontent among 50 million-odd cane growers, forcing the government to take steps to ameliorate their hardships. It could not be lost on the government that only if the industry returns to health, the crisis on the farm front will end.
Therefore, for the first time in this agro-based industry’s history, the government tells factories not to sell sugar at below a given minimum price. The enormity of the crisis resulting from sugar output in the current season exceeding 32 mt, an unanticipated jump from 20.30 mt in 2016-17, has also led New Delhi to tell the industry to freeze stocks totalling 3 mt at mill godowns for one year starting July 1. The government will reimburse the mills the interest, insurance and storage charges of sugar to be kept in buffer with the objective of the industry using the funds to settle cane bills.
Expectedly, the market greeted the government moves by posting better and better ex-mill sugar prices. The other positives for the industry are New Delhi sanctioning a nearly Rs3 a litre hike in ethanol procurement price to Rs 43.70, doubling of sugar import duty to 100 per cent, removing the 20 per cent export duty and finally reintroducing the monthly sugar quota release mechanism that was dispensed with in 2013 as part of progressive reforms.
“The Union government once again telling the states how much sugar they could sell in a month could be seen as a step back on reforms. But these are extraordinarily difficult times for factories and farmers requiring extraordinary steps,” says industry official Om Prakash Dhanuka. Even if exceptions are not to be taken for the revival of sugar release system, one fails to understand the rationale behind UP, which is having the highest share of unpaid cane bills given a lower release quota than Maharashtra. How will UP-based factories speed up the process of paying farmers their dues with a total June and July sale quota of 1.26 mt? Hopefully, UP will start getting a better deal from August onwards.
The Indian government and industry will face a bigger challenge next season beginning October when sugar production could be anything between 33.83 mt and 35 mt. The forecast of a good monsoon, cane offering better returns to growers vis a vis competing for crops and productivity improvements resulting from rising planting of the early season and high-yielding varieties of cane, particularly in UP and Maharashtra have combined to likely bring an additional 250,000 hectares to 5.2 m hectares under cane cultivation. Growing condition remaining ideal, the country will have a bumper cane crop of 415 mt in the next season, according to a USDA foreign agricultural service report.