Press Release: SAC Responds to Extra-Regional Brown Sugar Importation

February 16, 2024

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) is deeply concerned about local media reports from St. Lucia that suggests that a shortage of brown sugar on the island has created a need to import extra-regional brown sugar. These reports have been reprinted in other regional publications like, ‘The Gleaner’ from Jamaica.

SAC Chairman Mac McLachlan says, “SAC recognizes that sugar supply and demand is a serious business, but we can confirm regionally produced brown sugar is available.” He continued, “There are four (4) countries and eight (8 ) producers of sugar in CARICOM. So, there are plenty options that can be exercised without shopping extra-regionally.” He concluded by saying, “The regional sugar industry is playing its part in achieving the ‘25% x 2025 food-import-reduction target’ agreed by CARICOM Member States, and heavily promoted by regional Ministers of Agriculture. SAC has seen significant increase in regional consumption, but the work continues to ensure that the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) works fully for sugar and other regional products."

SAC hopes that all members of the Community will continue to support regional objectives to guarantee food security and reduce the high costs associated with food importation.

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For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

Mac McLachlan

Chairman, SAC

m +44 7785 682810

Email. mac.mclachlan@asr-group.com

William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

Press Release: Meeting of the Board of Directors – 08 May, 2023

 Members of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met virtually on 08 May 2023. 

The Chairman of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC), Mr. R. Karl James presided over the meeting with full participation from the four sugar producing CARICOM member states. The Directors provided updates on the 2022-2023 crop and deliveries to the CARICOM/EU/UK and USA markets.

 Intra-Regional Sugar Trade

Directors noted the increase in demand for regional brown sugar, and with the Monitoring Mechanism for Sugars established, SAC hopes that regional producers are guaranteed the opportunity to supply the regional market. Evidence currently supports that regional demand is being met completely by regional production. This augurs well for SAC members who currently can supply all the regional brown sugar needs. All four SAC members are supplying brown sugar to buyers in CARICOM.

 Industries Plans

After several challenging years, primarily due to climate change issues, Guyana’s industry shows signs of a rebound and is on track to meet its production target this year. In the medium term, Guysuco’s plan is to maximise sugar production at 100,000 tonnes in 2024.  Meanwhile in Belize, Belize Sugar Industries Ltd (BSI) continues to increase its annual sugar production, which is projected at 126, 00 tonnes in this crop year 2022-2023. Additionally, Barbados saw a small production increase and has now enhanced its product offering with an improved value-added, packaged sugar product to the US market, which traditionally bought bulk raw sugar for refining. This strong production growth and continued value added development form the basis for the region’s self-sufficiency in sugar and is proof positive of SAC’s contribution to regional food security. 

SAC Future Work Plan

The Directors received an update on the Association’s proposed Work Plan. Key components of the plan are Green Energy Production, Carbon Credits and Markets, Food Security, Climate Resilience and Integrated Pest Management among other crossing cutting areas for sugar producing states, the regional agriculture sector and the wider CARICOM. Members are currently conducting internal consultations, country and company, with each member identifying priority areas for implementation. A special technical working group, with representation from each member, will meet later this month to finalize the plan and decide on next steps to operationalize the plan based the agreed focus areas.

 Appointment of SAC Chairman

 At its Annual General Meeting the Directors appointed Mr. Mac McLachlan Chairman of the Association for the remainder of 2022-23 financial year and 2023-24. Mr. McLachlan is Belize’ Director and Country Manager for Belize Sugar Industry Ltd. (BSI). At the same time, the Directors expressed their heartfelt appreciation to the outgoing Chairman, Mr. Roderick Karl James of Jamaica for his consistent and sterling contributions to the regional sugar industry.

 SAC continues to work diligently to play an active part in the Regional Agricultural Sector Plan, which aims to reduce CARICOM’s food import bill by 25 percent by the year 2025. Additionally, SAC looks forward to working with the CARICOM Special Ministerial Task Force on Food Security.

 ---ENDS---

 For further information, see our website:  www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

 Mac McLachlan

Chairman, SAC

m         +44 7785 682810

Email. mac.mclachlan@asr-group.com

 William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

m         +501 610-9774

Email.  william.neal@asr-group.com

Press Release: Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) BOD Virtual Meeting

March 3, 2023

Members of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met virtually on 22 February 2023.

The Chairman of SAC, Mr. R. Karl James presided over the meeting with full participation from the four sugar producing CARICOM states. With annual crops underway, or about to start, SAC Directors verified last year’s production statistics and shared projections for the current crop. SAC members also shared challenges and opportunities as they continue to invest to shore up the ability to supply the quantity while diversifying production quality to match all regional sugar demand as well.

Industries Plans

SAC Directors updated individual industry plans and highlighted a number of positive developments. Guyana has plans to bring additional lands under cane production and is expected to increase sugar production from 60, 000 metric tonnes this year to 100,000 metric tonnes by 2024. A newly refurbished Rose Hall factory, previously closed, is expected to be operational by September of this year. Meanwhile in Belize, this year’s sugar production is projected to approach the 200, 000 metric tonnes mark—the majority of which is destined for regional sugar markets. Additionally, Barbados has enhanced its offering with an improved value-added, packaged sugar product for a key market that it traditionally only provided raw sugar.

Intra-Regional Sugar Trade

Directors noted that the Monitoring Mechanism for Sugar (MMS), implemented in conjunction with CARICOM Secretariat, continues to contribute positively to the intra-regional sugar trade, which has doubled annually since 2019. The MMS is a key tool for the sustained full enforcement of the Common External Tariff (CET) on extra-regional sourced sugar. The two main producers, Belize and Guyana, corroborated the regional growth momentum and expressed the hope for sustained demand uptrends.

SAC Future Work Plan

The Directors received an update on the Association’s proposed Work Plan. Key components of the plan are Green Energy Production, Carbon Credits and Markets, Food Security, Climate Resilience and Integrated Pest Management among other crossing cutting areas for sugar producing states, the regional agriculture sector and the wider CARICOM. Members are currently conducting internal consultations, country and company, with each member identifying priority areas for implementation. A special technical working group, with representation from each member, will collaborate to operationalize the plan based the agreed focus areas.

Regional Food Security

Directors reaffirmed their commitment to the Regional Agricultural Sector Plan, which aims to reduce CARICOM’s food import bill by 25 percent by the year 2025. Despite being a sensitive industry, sugar is still positioned to demonstrate its capacity to meet and even surpass that goal. SAC, therefore, reiterates publicly its desire to work with the CARICOM Special Ministerial Task Force on Food Security and plans to present its Work Plan to them.

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James

Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637/+ 876 817 0993

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

Press Release: 171st Meeting of the Board of Directors – 03 & 04 November 2022

Members of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met on 03 & 04 November 2022 in Georgetown, Guyana for their 171st Board of Directors Meeting.

The Guyana Sugar Corporation (GUYSUCO) hosted the Meeting. The Directors would like to express their thanks to the Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Sasenarine Singh and staff for their assistance with organising the meeting.

Meetings with Guyana’s Minister of Agriculture and the Deputy Secretary General, CARICOM Secretariat

The Chairman of SAC, Mr. R. Karl James and Dr. Kusha Haraksingh, Adviser, paid courtesy calls on the Honourable Zulfikar Mustapha, Minister of Agriculture, Guyana and Mr. Joseph Cox, Deputy Secretary General, CARICOM Secretariat. Minister Mustapha assured them of Guyana’s commitment to SAC and informed of plans to increase the country’s sugar production in the immediate future. The SAC officials discussed with ASG Cox CARICOM’s operationalizing of the Monitoring Mechanism for Sugar (MMS) and improved sourcing of regional brown sugar.

SAC Future Work Plan

The Directors discussed a Future Work Plan for the Association. Key components of the plan are Green Energy Production, Carbon Credits and Markets, Food Security, Climate Resilience and Integrated Pest Management among other crossing cutting areas for sugar producing states, the regional agriculture sector and the wider CARICOM. A special technical working group will be established to operationalize the plan based on priority areas.

The Directors also took note of and endorsed the Regional Agricultural Sector Plan, which aims to reduce CARICOM’s food import bill by 25 percent by the year 2025. The Association agreed to work with the CARICOM Special Ministerial Task Force on Food Security and plan to present its Work Plan to them.

Intra-Regional Trade

The meeting was pleased to verify that intra-regional brown sugar trade was increasing to reflect the goals of the CSME. This is a major step for SAC members as they have maintained there is more than enough regional supply to meet all of the regional sugar demand. Trade has almost doubled annually since 2019.

Industry Plans

Members provided updates on future industry plans. The meeting was apprised of plans by GUYSUCO to increase sugar production to 100,000 tonnes by 2024, and to increase production of direct consumption sugars.

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James

Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

PRESS RELEASE: Brown Sugar Challenge CCJ Decision

February 04, 2022

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) notes with interest the ruling of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) in the case taken by Belize against Trinidad and Tobago for alleged non-application of the Common External Tariff (CET) on brown sugar entering T&T from extra regional sources.  Non-payment of the 40% CET on imported extra-regional brown sugar is a direct violation of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas (RTC). SAC saw distortions in the regional sugar market and started collecting data to track sugar flows, particularly, into the region.  After analyzing and sharing the information, collected over the past three years, and recognizing the downward trends in the market, Belize saw the need for a legal challenge.

The CCJ ruled that the evidence presented to support the claim was insufficient to shift burden to T&T.  Much of the evidence submitted by Belize had come directly from websites containing exact information of shipment details and was supported in some instances with copies of Bills of Lading.  In the hearing Trinidad showed that they had not diligently followed up on the evidence provided. However, the Court said it would not recognize the evidence from Belize since it was unauthored. In the end, Belize did not press the claim for compensation, since it was difficult to prove potential losses, but signaled that it was content for the Court to provide a firm ruling on the requirement for member states to properly enforce the CET.

SAC commends the Court for this statement. SAC believes that if the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) will not work for sugar, it will not work for anything. SAC producers have noticed increasing opportunities to market their brown sugars within CARICOM as a result of this case and will continue to monitor carefully extra regional imports and community pricing. Protection of the brown sugar market as set out in the RTC is one small contribution to maintaining the regional sugar industry’s viability.

After the CCJ announcement, SAC Chairman R. Karl James said, “This case highlighted the lost opportunity in the CARICOM market for regional sugar producers and signals to everyone that SAC will continue to actively monitor the CARICOM markets sugar flows.” He continued, “SAC views the CCJ decision’s statement on the CET as a call for CARICOM Member States to honor the policies set out in the RTC, and let the CSME work as envisioned to the benefit all Member States.”  

SAC also implores the Community to operationalize the Monitoring Mechanism agreed at the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) for regional sugar flows that will help to provide veracity to the CSME policies regarding sugar.    

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For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

 

William A. Neal

Government Affairs and Communications Officer,

Belize Sugar Industries Limited

 t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

PRESS RELEASE: Brown Sugar CCJ Challenge (November 08, 2021)

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) commends the Government of Belize for taking action in the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) against alleged non-application of the Common External Tariff (CET) on brown sugar entering Trinidad and Tobago from extra regional sources in violation of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas (RTC).

Over the last three years, SAC has repeatedly raised its concerns about this practice that has drastically diluted the value and demand of the CARICOM market for regional sugar producers. Lawyers representing the Government of Belize provided evidence of more than 4000 metric tons of sugar imported without any record of CET being paid. This evidence was underscored by a dramatic fall off in prices for brown sugar during the same period. SAC has long contended that the level of pricing demanded by sugar importers to Trinidad & Tobago as well as some other CARICOM Member States, could not be supportive of full implementation of the CET, which is set at 40% of the CIF value of sugar entering from extra-regional sources.

The Court heard that as the Governments focus on the serious issues confronting the world on dangerous climate increases at the COP26 meeting in Glasgow, it is fitting to focus on sugar cane, a regenerative agricultural crop that not only is a significant sequester of carbon but also the source for the production of green, renewable electricity across the region. Most global industries enjoy the benefits of protected domestic and regional markets. Protection of the brown sugar market as set out in the RTC is one small contribution to maintaining this industry’s viability and one that SAC believes should be strictly maintained and enforced.

Commenting on Belize’s decision not to press for compensation for lost opportunity in the regional market, SAC Chairman R. Karl James said, “This case was not primarily about compensation, it is about ensuring that protections set out in the Treaty, and reinforced by numerous decisions of COTED, are abided by. Otherwise, the CSME would have very little relative value for any of its members.”

The Judges will now consider their decision the evidence and law presented.

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James Chairman, SAC

Email. karljam@gmail.com

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

William A. Neal

Government Affairs and Communications Officer, Belize Sugar Industries Limited

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Press Release- SAC COTED finalizes Monitoring Mechanism for Sugar TOR

October 20, 2021

On 12 October, 2021 Trade Ministers, at the 97th Special Meeting of the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED), via videoconference, finalized the terms of reference for the monitoring mechanism for sugar (MMS) to ensure that there is greater transparency and information flows to inform regional producers and users of the supply and demand of all sugars. Also, Member States agreed that the first meeting of the MMS will be held before the end of 2021 or as soon thereafter as is reasonably practicable.

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) applauds the COTED and recognizes that this approval concludes the discussions on the MMS held at the 89th and 90th Special Meeting of the COTED (February 4 and March 26, 2021, respectively). SAC sees this as the final hurdle and that the development and implementation of the MMS, agreed at the Forty-Ninth Regular COTED Meeting in 2019, should provide the data necessary for CARICOM sugar industries to match production with demand within the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).

When the MMS is established and implemented, it aims to ensure where extra-regional imports of refined sugar are being contemplated, regional producers are given the opportunity to prove that they are able to supply the quantities and specifications required as indicated through an application to the COTED. Only where regional suppliers are unable to supply will Member States be authorized to exempt the payment of the Common External Tariff (CET) on imports of sugar from non-CARICOM sources.

This decision is another key incentive for regional sugar producers to continue investment in value-added products, with the confidence that they will have a home in their own regional market.

Directors of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) are due to meet in November to harmonize next steps to maximize the benefits of the greater intra-regional market access for locally produced sugar.

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Government Affairs and Communications Officer, Belize Sugar Industries Limited

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

Sugar Association of the Caribbean Press Release: SAC CONCERNED CSME STILL NOT WORKING FOR SUGAR

DATE: November 05, 2020

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met on 29 October 2020 and has registered its concerns about continued undermining of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) for sugar. Despite the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) agreement in 2019 to tighten compliance with the Common External Tariff (CET) and the systems that govern it, individual companies continue to over-estimate their requirements for imported extra regional, CET-free sugar.

In November 2019, COTED mandated the Community to introduce a monitoring mechanism to tighten control of sugar imports. So far, this has not materialised. In recent months, exaggerated requests for CET waivers under the safeguard mechanism indicate scant regard has been paid to the political sentiments expressed by COTED. In one recent case, a single manufacturer has sought permission to import around half of their country’s national annual demand.

The situation regarding extra regional imports of brown sugar in contravention of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas rules has resulted in a legal challenge by Belize in the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), a move that SAC and its members have supported.

SAC Chairman R. Karl James said, “Sugar industries across the Caribbean are investing to meet regional demand for sugar. It is imperative the regulatory system to support CARICOM businesses steps up to incentivise that investment. This will lead to improved regional food security and a resurgent agro economy in the Caribbean – never more important than now facing the impacts of COVID-19 – while supporting hundreds of thousands of Caribbean livelihoods. It is ridiculous to import most of our sugar from outside the region, when Caribbean sugar is under-utilised at home”.

SAC announced that regional production for 2021 is likely to exceed 400,000 Metric Tons (MT) of sugar, far in excess of total regional demand of 280,000 MT. Yet traditionally only a quarter of this is utilised in the region. Sugar industries are investing to ensure that high quality, food-grade sugar is

available for Caribbean products and to ensure that the regulatory mechanisms designed to support Caribbean business work for sugar as they do for other products.

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James

Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

Sugar Association of the Caribbean Press Release: CARICOM sugar producers to accelerate investments to meet regional market demand

December 12, 2019

Directors/Members

Mr. Leslie Parris - BARBADOS AGRICULTURAL MANAGEMENT CO.

Mr. Mac McLachlan - BELIZE SUGAR INDUSTRIES LIMITED

Dr. Harold Davis- GUYANA SUGAR CORPORATION INC.

Mr. R. Karl James - SUGAR MANUFACTURING CORPORATION OF JAMAICA LTD.

CARICOM sugar producers to accelerate investments to meet regional market demand

Last month’s Trade Ministers’ decision at COTED to the incremental protection of regionally produced sugars when it meets the standards required by regional users of sugar was discussed at this week’s meeting of Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) Directors.

Recognizing that the future of these important industries lies in the full regional integration of CARICOM produced sugars into CARICOM supply chains, SAC agreed to accelerate investment to produce higher quantities of quality, food grade sugar for this purpose.

Several regional industries in Belize and Guyana have already embarked on significant investment programmes aimed at meeting regional demand. Already the region producers almost double CARICOM’s annual sugar demand, but two thirds of that demand continues to be filled with extra regional imported sugar dumped into the CARICOM market tariff free, forcing CARICOM producers out of their own market.

SAC industries have agreed to make further investments to ensure regionally produced sugar is of a quality suitable for industrial users of sugar. This follows an independent study produced for the CARICOM Secretariat that proved the widespread use of plantation white and other direct consumption sugars in regional and global supply chains. The COTED decision guaranteeing Treaty protection for regional sugar once this is achieved helps to underpin that investment.

SAC also discussed the continuing importation of brown sugar from outside the region without full application of the Common External Tariff. This practice has massively diluted the value of the regional market for regional sugar producers. COTED agreed this practice should stop forthwith. A new monitoring mechanism of sugar flows also agreed at COTED will enforce the correct use of Treaty protections moving forward. SAC deliberated on the principles this monitoring mechanism should embrace.

171st Meeting and 79th Ordinary General Meeting of the Board of Directors of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean - 11 December 2019, Barbados

Intra-Regional Sugar Trade

Excluding individual domestic market needs, SAC producers are projecting sales of 60,000 tonnes of direct consumption sugar to non -producing countries in the Region in 2019-2020.

Extra Regional Sugar Trade

In 2018/2019, SAC members exported 209,055 tonnes of raw sugar to the European Union and 41,164 tonnes to the Unites States markets, a total of 250,219 tonnes. These exports show that regional producers have the capacity to supply the CARICOM market. Given the low prices obtained in the EU, these exports can be diverted to the regional market once the necessary protection is implemented as per the COTED decision last month.

Election of Chairman of SAC for the year 2019/2020.

Mr. R. Karl James was re-elected as Chairman of the SAC for the year 2019/2020

---ENDS---

For further information, see our website: www.caribbean-sugar.org

Or please contact:

R. Karl James Chairman, SAC

t + 876 929-6213

m + 876 371-2637

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Government Affairs and Communications Officer, Belize Sugar Industries Limited

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email: william.neal@asr-group.com

Dominican Today: The last chance for CARICOM sugar?

David Jessop, Dominican Today senior Op-Ed contributor

Last month CARICOM’s Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) took a decision that will likely determine whether Anglophone Caribbean sugar producers have a sustainable future.

In Georgetown on November 18 Trade Ministers approved the conditional and incremental enforcement of tariffs on sugar imported from extra regional sources under widely used exemptions to the region’s Common External Tariff (CET).

What they agreed was that imported refined sugar can continue to be exempted from the CET until white sugar produced in the region satisfies the specifications and quality required by manufacturers and is produced in sufficient quantities within the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME).

It was decided too that refined white sugar should only be ineligible for conditional duty exemption when regional sugar producers can demonstrate the capacity to produce white sugar at a quantity that meets 75% of the regional demand, and is of the quality required by the manufacturers of food and beverage products.

Trade ministers also approved the immediate establishment of a mechanism to monitor all regional sugar flows, in part to strengthen the enforcement of existing arrangements for extra-regional sugar imports, and in order to be able to form a realistic judgment about the balance between future regional supply and demand.

COTED was responding to year-long representations by the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) to the effect that unless definitive action was taken to halt the failure of governments to impose the existing 40 per cent CET on imported sugar, the industry may not have a future.

SAC had noted that more than two-thirds of CARICOM’s sugar demand was being supplied by extra regional sugar imports, even though the industry in CARICOM annually produces more sugar than the Anglophone part of the region requires. It had also said that increasing volumes of third country white and more recently brown sugar, was entering from Colombia, Guatemala and other countries to supply Caribbean manufacturers of soft drinks and confectionery to the detriment of the region’s balance of trade.

In reaching their decision, COTED ministers had to balance the interests of an industry vital to rural life and a significant employer, against the interests of influential domestic manufacturing industries which provide consumers and export markets with price competitive food products using imported sugars.

The issue also had wider implications.

Sugar producers had argued that anything less than enforcing the region’s rules and policies would amount to an abrogation of responsibility regarding the principles and functionality of the CSME. In contrast, manufacturers associations had expressed concern about whether the industry and sugar refiners in the region could meet the specifications, volume and standards required to sustain the reputation of large export-oriented food and beverages manufacturers.

SAC has since expressed satisfaction with COTED’s decision, but it remains to be seen whether the industry can now meet the challenge.

In Guyana its manufacturers and sugar producers have agreed that the 40% CET will not apply specifically to use by food and beverage manufacturers until at least 2022 when an upgraded plant is expected to come on stream.

There, the Guyana Sugar Corporation Inc (GuySuCo) has confirmed its commitment to producing white sugar to the standard that would meet the requirements of the food and beverage producing members of the Guyana Manufacturing and Services Association (GMSA). It said that it was tendering for a plant to produce white sugar of the required quality and colour with a target of early 2022 for first production.

Stabroek News subsequently reported that this will involve the upgrading the capacity of an existing white sugar plant at Albion to be operational by the end of 2021, and that the industry is aiming to produce some 160,000 tonnes of sugar per annum by 2025.

However, the test of whether the gradualist approach proposed will enable sugar producers to survive would seem to a significant extent to lie now with the manufacturers.

This is because Stabroek News also quoted the GMSA as emphasising that only when quality white sugar is produced and manufactured within Guyana and is available to the required specifications at a reasonably competitive price, would they purchase such sugar for food production.

Whether what has been agreed regionally is therefore enough to save all of what is left of an innately conservative industry remains to be seen.

The English-speaking Caribbean largely consists of high cost sugar producers, no longer has any significant prospect in external markets, has not done enough to add value or linkages, and except for Belize has no efficient large-scale quality refining capacity. Most estates also continue to suffer from operational inefficiencies and over optimistic assumptions by trades unions.

Having obtained a CET solution of sorts, sugar producers will have to rapidly demonstrate they really can deliver on what they have sought and show how a CARICOM cane industry defended by all CARICOM member states remains relevant to the region’s future economic development.

Having successfully made its case, the industry jointly and separately now needs to convert hearts and minds by providing hard economic facts about its plans for rationalisation, downstream integration, greater private sector involvement, and for instance in relation to other opportunities such as power generation.

It also needs to think much more about how closer integration with other industries might bring new forms of social benefit to rural areas.  For example, there would be value in exploring the experience of Mauritius or the French speaking Caribbean which have developed the idea that sugar as a product of a ‘terroir’ can be linked to valuable island-wide marketing opportunities, the environment, rum and tourism, as well as the export of quality branded sugar products and foodstuffs.

SAC was fully justified in calling for CARICOM’s CET on imported sugar to be respected. Belize and some privatised parts of the industry, for example in Jamaica, have demonstrated that sugar can be made viable and has a future. However, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that unless the industry can develop new thinking while it seeks to meet manufacturers requirements, the future may not be too bright for the Caribbean’s once dominant sugar sector.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at

david.jessop@caribbean-council.org

Previous columns can be found at https://www.caribbean-council.org/research-analysis/