To address liquidity stress in the sugar industry and facilitate timely payment of cane arrears, the Centre last year had announced a subsidy of Rs 4.50 per quintal of cane crushed during October 2015-September 2016 season with a condition that mills meet the export quota of four million tonnes and ethanol blending target.
The subsidy scheme has now been discontinued and the government is yet to make payments to mills.
As per official statement, the CCEA has approved the revision in the export quota and ethanol supply target for calculating the production subsidy.
"This has been done to offset cost of cane and facilitate timely payment of cane price dues of farmers," it said.
With the revised formula, the production subsidy outgo to sugar mills would come down to Rs 600 crore as against previously estimated Rs 1,147.5 crore, sources said.
"However, production subsidy on actual cane crushing would be provided to sugar mills proportionate to their achievement on export and ethanol supply targets with equal weightage," it clarified.
"Initially, the export quota target was scaled at 15.70
kg of sugar for each tonne of 'estimated cane crushing'. Now, the export quota would be revised on a scale of 15.70 kg of sugar for each tonne of cane 'actually crushed' by the mills during current sugar season or previously notified export quota target, whichever is lower," the statement said.
In case of mills/distillery not offering supplies ethanol so far, the existing allocation already notified, will remain unchanged, it said.
The performance of ethanol supply would be assessed on the basis of actual supply made against pro-rated supply schedule fixed by OMCs till June, 2016 with respect to contracted quantities, it added.
Mills have been able to export 1.6 million tonnes compared with the target of 4 million tonnes for this year as domestic prices improved after the scheme.
