Millers claim sugar industry in crisis

By Our Correspondent
December 08, 2023

LAHORE:Pakistan Sugar Mills Association Punjab (Zone) spokesperson claimed that the sugar industry has been under severe crisis for past many years and sugar manufacturers are constantly compelled to conduct business in an environment unprecedented in any other agro-based industry where the minimum fixed price of sugarcane is determined by provincial governments while the mills are forced to sell sugar at subdued rates to facilitate the consumers at an ex-mill price determined by market forces.

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In a statement issued her Thursday, he said, on the other hand, the mills are compelled to sell sugar below its production costs to ensure timely payments to growers and fulfill its working capital requirements.

The image shows an inside view of a sugar mill. —APP/File

Current sugar prices have been negatively impacted by last season’s carryover stocks due to minimal exports against surplus of one million metric tonnes valuing one billion dollars and ‘unlawful’ restrictions imposed on interprovincial movement of sugar to deficit provinces, he said. Any intervention or support by the government to permit exports or purchase of surplus sugar stocks by Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP), to be kept as strategic reserves, is not forthcoming despite repeated requests.

Sugarcane is a major raw material and cost component (about 80%) of sugar production. For crushing season 2023-24, its minimum support price fixed by the provincial government has an increase of 33 percent in Punjab and 41 percent in Sindh. Sugar mills are already facing liquidity crunch due to squeeze on credit lines and increase in mark-up rates, wages, prices of imported chemicals, transportation costs and other high inflationary trends in last two years. Cost of production of sugar has increased manifold while currently the ex-mill price of sugar has gone down much below its cost of production, he claimed.

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