Press Release: COTED decision a lifeline for CARICOM Sugar

November 28, 2019

On 19 November, 2019 Trade Ministers, at the Forty-Ninth Meeting of The Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED), agreed principles that could radically alter future prospects for CARICOM sugar industries and permit them to regain their place in the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).

Directors of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) are due to meet in early December to reflect on the COTED meeting outcomes, which agreed to the incremental enforcement of tariffs on imported white sugar as and when the region produces it.

This decision will provide the incentives, needed by regional sugar producers, for continued investment in value-added products, with the confidence that they will have a home in their own regional market.

Presently over two-thirds of market demand in CARICOM is imported from outside the region, leaving sugar producers little choice than to export their own product on the global market at unremunerative prices.

The meeting also agreed to the immediate establishment of a mechanism to monitor all regional sugar flows. This will play a major part in strengthening enforcement of existing arrangements for extra-regional sugar imports, providing a realistic assessment of supply and demand moving forward. Part of this will be to ensure that the CET on brown sugar, which is currently entering the market from outside the region, must be rigorously enforced by member states.

The COTED decisions came following a detailed analysis of the widespread use of Plantation White sugar in manufacturing both globally and within the region. These decisions also reflect an understanding between manufacturers and sugar producers that when quality of regional production is assured, it will receive tariff protection in accordance with the provisions of the Revised Treaty.

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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

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

Forbes: Can Caribbean Sugar Make A Sweet Comeback?

Article Link: https://www.forbes.com/sites/daphneewingchow/2019/10/31/can-caribbean-sugar-make-a-sweet-comeback/#78db380c5a44

The Caribbean sugar industry is at a crossroads. Free market pressures, operational inefficiencies and sugar producers’ inability to meet manufacturers’ demand for refined white sugar have been a major source of frustration, resulting in an over-reliance on extra-regional sugar imports. Guyana, Belize, Jamaica and Barbados are currently in the process of determining whether a combination of tariffs, structural and operational reforms and the substitution of less refined plantation white sugar for use in the manufacturing sector, might just hold the answer to the resuscitation of the flailing sector.

In 2017, during one of the more “sticky” periods in the history of sugar, the Caribbean lost its preferential market status in Europe, with the abolition of European sugar production quotas. This appeared to be the beginning of the end for the region’s sugar industry and it was predicted that with the consequent depression in world sugar prices, the entire export market would eventually be lost. Trinidad & Tobago and St. Kitts and Nevis’ shut up shop almost immediately.

Since 2017, regionally produced sugar has had to compete with foreign imports of refined white sugar from Guatemala, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, typically used in the manufacture of food, and beverage products such as baked goods and sugary drinks. Regional manufacturers have been vehement that locally produced plantation white sugar is unsuitable for these uses.

Today, more than two-thirds of the sugar consumed in the Caribbean originates from outside sources, displacing some 200,000 metric tons of regionally produced sugar. In 2018 alone, Jamaica accounted for more than 20% of the region’s 61,717,886 kilograms of total refined sugar extra-regional imports (Sugar Association of the Caribbean)— a staggering figure given that Jamaica is a sugar producing country. In 2018, total sugar imports to the region’s sugar producers were valued at $16.4 million for Jamaica, $6.2 million for Barbados, $4.2 million for Guyana and $138,000 for Belize. (worldstopexports.com) It is no wonder that the local industry is struggling.

In an attempt to save the sector, the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) has lobbied for the imposition of protective measures in the form of a 40% Common External Tariff (CET) but these recommendations have encountered ongoing resistance by the manufacturing sector who are highly reliant on imported sugar. The SAC has upheld that the Caribbean produces enough sugar to satisfy regional demand, which would reduce CARICOM’s balance of trade deficit by between $132.5 million and $271.7 million per annum.

According to the SAC, “a regional sugar industry supplying the needs of industrial users of sugar in the region makes sense– both to reduce import costs, support CARICOM industries, and provide long-term consistent pricing, beneficial to both buyer and seller.”

In April 2019, the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) funded a study to determine whether locally produced plantation white would be suitable for regional manufacturing. The findings, which were reported at a sugar stakeholders’ meeting in Belize in October, revealed that soft drink makers Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and Nestlé have been using plantation white sugar in manufacturing for some time and that this sugar could be used in manufacturing once production facilities make changes to processes, meeting requirements for colour and other impurities. This was a huge victory for the SAC.

“We import two-thirds of the estimated 320,000 tonnes of the refined sugar consumed annually within CARICOM,” said Daniel Best, CDB’s Director of Special Projects. “If plantation white can be substituted for refined white sugar, regional producers can capture a larger share of the sugar market and the region can save considerable foreign exchange.”

These findings have opened a market for 160,000 tonnes per annum of plantation white sugar and cut extra-regional imports of refined sugar, of about 200,000 tonnes per year.

Another hurdle that the sector will need to overcome is the high production cost of plantation white sugar, causing foreign sugar imports to be a more cost effective option. Producers have agreed to meet to discuss issues pertaining to the supply and price of the product.

Over the past two years, Guyana has closed three sugar estates and sent home approximately 4,000 workers, but in the wake of October’s sugar stakeholder meetings, it initiated plans to begin producing plantation white and Jamaica’s Minister of Agriculture, the Honourable Audley Shaw, has recognized that the sector needs a revamp and more needs to be done. It is expected that these markets will soon begin producing liquid sugar for use in beverage factories.

In Barbados, Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, the Honourable Indar Weir has been working on putting over 100 acres of Barbados Agricultural Management Company (BAMC) land back into sugar production with special emphasis on drought-resistant strains of sugar cane.

“I fully support the capacity building efforts that are designed to transition the sugar industry to a full value chain development (VCD) project,” said Minister Weir. “This will provide us with new revenue streams along the full value chain so that all Barbadians can own shares in a new profitable entity that will give farmers, manufacturers and retailers new hope for empowerment and enfranchisement.”

As the leading regional producer of plantation refined white sugar, with more than 99% market share, the prospects for Belizean sugar look good. The Government of Belize continues to play a major role in regional discussions to secure a CARICOM market for Caribbean sugar products.

In the Caribbean, the failure of a sector that employs over 40,000 and indirectly supports up to 400,000 persons would be tragic. In order to avoid this devastating outcome the interests of all stakeholders from sugar to manufacturing as well as the needs of the end user, both from a price and quality perspective need to be taken into account, while focusing on innovation and opportunities such as the generation of alternative energy (17% of Belize’s energy requirements are supplied by sugar mills) and the development of new products. 

The Gleaner (Jamaica): Sugar breakthrough - CARICOM producers upbeat after Belize meetings

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Website Link: http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/business/20191009/sugar-breakthrough-caricom-producers-upbeat-after-belize-meetings

A Caribbean Development Bank-funded technical study has found that plantation white sugar can be used to replace refined sugar and, in fact, is being used in manufacturing processes within Caricom and elsewhere in the world, a finding that has changed the tone of a trade dispute among Caricom producers.

Interest groups came away from a series of meetings in Belize, where the report was presented, saying the talks from October 2-4 made more progress in the past week than in the past several years in resolving the long-running stand-off between sugar producers and manufacturers over the quality of white sugar, also called plantation white.

The two sides are fighting over the high volumes of refined sugar being imported into the region to the disadvantage of regional producers of plantation white.

“It’s the best progress we have made in years,” said Karl James, chairman of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean, SAC.

Providing an update on the discussions, James said there were also presentations on the long-standing use of plantation white sugar by large companies, including soft drink makers Coca-Cola and PepsiCo and food and drink manufacturing conglomerate Nestlé.

The report is a win for Belize, which is the leading producer of plantation white sugar, accounting for nearly all of the region’s output; and potentially for Guyana, which is said to be advanced with plans to start producing plantation white.

With the question answered by empirical study, the region’s ministers of agriculture and trade have agreed to forward a number of recommendations for agreement and policy changes at the next meeting of Caricom’s Council for Trade and Economic Development in November.

The main proposed policy change is central to a lobby effort mounted by the SAC running several years and involves the imposition of the existing 40 per cent common external tariff, CET, on all sugar – brown, refined and plantation white – entering Caricom markets from outside the regional grouping. Jamaica and Barbados are the other Caricom sugar-producing territories.

The application for granting of waivers or exemptions from applying the CET on refined sugar in countries with heavy manufacturing operations like Trinidad & Tobago and Jamaica has been a source of upset for sugar producers in the region for some time.

The Belize decisions are likely to provide a ready Caricom market for 160,000 tonnes of plantation white sugar produced in the region each year and slash the extra-regional imports of refined sugar, which is said to be about 200,000 tonnes per year.

James said the Belize meetings produced further evidence that not only are large amounts of refined sugar being exempted on the basis that the product is not produced in the region, but that substantial amounts of plantation white sugar are also being imported from Guatemala, Brazil and Colombia without the established tariff being applied.

Producers and users of white sugar in the region have agreed to meet to discuss issues pertaining to the supply and price of the product as the region readies itself for a policy shift that is likely to see the greater purchase and use of plantation white sugar to make products including sodas, flavoured water, other drinks, as well as a wide range of baked products and other foods.

“That is where we are, and we are hoping to do some legwork between now and November so that more of the users will understand what we are trying to do,” James said in interview with the Financial Gleaner on Tuesday.

The talks will now turn to whether regional producers can supply Caricom manufacturers with the product in sufficient quantities, and at the desired quality levels and price.

“We are prepared to sit with the manufacturers and talk rationally about their needs,” James said.

It is expected that the key point to be resolved in those discussions will be the matter of the price at which the product will be sold to regional manufacturers, who have been seeking the cheapest source of white sugar to maintain their efficiencies, product price points and profit margins.

James adds that liquid sugar, which is more desirable for drink manufacturing, could soon be produced by Jamaica, Belize and Guyana and will receive the same policy treatment as other forms of sugar. This decision is likely to encourage the reopening of some liquid sugar operations which were shuttered because of the lack of market protection.

Jamaica’s Worthy Park Estates is said to be poised to start making plantation white sugar and liquid sugar.


Guyana Stabroek News: Extensive tax evasion sinking struggling sugar industry - study recommends regional approach, tax on extra-regional imports to boost sector

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A study commissioned by Caribbean sugar producers has recommended a region-wide approach to producing white sugar and urged the enforcement of a tax on most sweeteners imported into the region even as domestic producers highlight extensive tax evasion by importers.

The report by the United Kingdom-headquartered LMC International has underscored the challenges faced by producers in Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries who struggle to compete with the cheap sugar sourced extra-regionally. As producers push for the application of the Common External Tariff (CET) that should be charged on sugar imported into the region, they have also highlighted that importers utilise various methods to evade the CET and benefit, too, from waivers to the detriment of regional producers.

The issue of applying the 40 per cent CET on refined sugar entering CARICOM has been under the spotlight of late, with the Guyana Sugar Corporation (GuySuCo) and the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) calling for the enforcement of the tariff. GuySuCo is seeking to produce plantation white sugar to boost its struggling fortunes and it recently said that it and other sugar producers’ groups representing sugar producing countries in the region had discussed applying the 40 per cent CET now only applied for non-regional brown sugar entering the regional market, to all sugars, including white sugars.

However, the Guyana Manufacturing and Services Association (GMSA) recently rejected the calls to apply the CET arguing that refined sugar-dependent companies could be forced to close and jobs could be lost. The local manufacturers have also claimed that white sugar produced here could negatively impact the quality of their products.

However, the January 2019 study by LMC International for SAC has said that regional producers can produce sugar to the standard required by manufacturers. The report, ‘The Substitutability of Plantation White Sugar and Refined Sugar in Industrial Processes’, highlighted the challenges faced by regional producers and outlined potential solutions.

Among other things, it said that small, fit-for-purpose processing plants could be established at existing industrial end user sites or a central facility could be set up within the region. As it relates to producing sugar that meets the standards required by manufacturers, it outlined several options including ion exchange treatment.

“Depending on the quality and stability of the plantation white sugar that is produced in CARICOM, hot carbon treatment or ion exchange treatment are likely to be the most suitable options with ion exchange being favoured if there is a risk of variation in the quality of the plantation white sugar produced,” the report said.

LMC said that several small processing plants be established in sugar producing nations to produce plantation white sugar or a central facility be set up, with Jamaica or Trinidad, where there is an out-of-use liquid sugar plant, likely to be the most suitable location.

“Small, fit-for-purpose processing plants [could be] established at existing industrial end user sites, with CARICOM producers ensuring that they produce plantation white sugars that consistently meet the require parameters,” the study says. It said that another solution “would be to establish a standalone central ion exchange based sugar treatment facility,” which could also have additional equipment modules to deal with sugars that are more difficult to treat or those that have wide variations in quality.

The location of the facility would be driven by scale and logistical convenience meaning that either Jamaica or Trinidad and Tobago would be the most likely suitable location, the report said while observing that there is already a liquid sugar plant in Trinidad, which is not currently in use “but could be brought back into production if the CET was applied to refined sugar imports.”

‘Guarantee’

But before the upfront investments are to be made, LMC said that investors would need to be given a guarantee by CARICOM’s Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) that a CET would remain in place at a certain level, for at least a certain specific number of years.

In addition, the report said that COTED would also have to agree that no tariff exemptions would be granted to end-users for imports of crystal sugars of any kind other than icing sugar and pharmaceutical grade sugars, and no leakages would take place in terms of permitting imports of sugar blends, fructose syrups, sugar syrups, blends of syrups and sugar-containing products, among others.

“Again, the intent of these restrictions would be to afford a meaningful level of protection to a dedicated domestic investment that would preserve the sugar industry within CARICOM and which, in its own right, would drive domestic investment and employment,” the report said.
SAC was also told that refined sugar users could still import that sweetener but they must pay the CET.

If its recommendations are implemented, LMC said that the steps would be “a fundamental change to the model of sugar production within CARICOM, focussing on the countries best suited to produce sugar for specific end-use applications, rather than all the sugar producing countries attempting to produce all grades and formats of sugar that address all the applications,” which would be sub-optimal, or in some cases, unfeasible.

And with the implementation of the recommendations, LMC underscored that technical expertise was also an equally important part of the matrix since ion exchange treatment “calls for greater technical skills, experience and oversight.”

Meanwhile, SAC and GuySuCo have highlighted that while the CET is intended to protect and support domestic production, sugar producers are experiencing a significant decline in the value of brown sugar within the region due to extra regional imports at prices that could not be supporting application of the CET.

“There is general oversupply of sugar in CARICOM due to excessive imports, imported under the CET waiver process that permits imports of refined sugar for use by food manufacturers. It is evident that the waiver process is being exploited,” they have outlined in a presentation. It was pointed out that the imported sugar primarily originates from Colombia and Guatemala and is being sold into the CARICOM region at values that are more than 50 per cent less than the domestic markets in both of these countries.

“These imports are damaging and displacing the market opportunity for CARICOM sugar producers in terms of both value and volume. They risk the decline of the CARICOM sugar industry,” it said.

“With low global market prices set to drive sugar producers out of business it is essential that the CARICOM governments and [CARICOM] Secretariat enforce the CET – both for brown and white sugar – in order to shelter the CARICOM producing countries from the trade distorting policies of much larger countries that are depressing global prices,” it added.

The extensive tax evasion that occurs when importing sugar was also highlighted.

According to the producers, it is evident that quantities of plantation white sugars are entering the CARICOM market, either purporting to be refined white sugar under waiver, or simply not paying the CET.

It said that plantation white sugar is produced within CARICOM to a high standard and the imports demonstrate that plantation white sugars are useable within the CARICOM market and that the CET procedures are being circumvented, with the impact of excluding CARICOM producers from their own market.

It was stated that market intelligence has shown a number of ways of CET avoidance.

These include omitting words in the manifested descriptions of the material shipped, and simply noting it as “sugar” rather than “brown”, “raw” or “white” or more detailed descriptions. It was also stated that traders seeking to capture part of the value of the CET, combine CARICOM origin sugars with imported sugar at an equivalent to 27 per cent CET on the full quality and then selling this to final buyers at the equivalent of 40 per cent CET.

It also said that anecdotal evidence from suppliers indicated that some CARICOM governments are not charging CET on brown sugars at all, but are charging a separate levy of around 10 per cent. It also highlighted that traders and food processors apply for CET waivers based on refined sugar volumes that are either not directly linked to industry needs (in the case of traders) or in excess of requirements (in the case of food processors).

Sources at GuySuCo told Sunday Stabroek that the corporation “takes a beating here due to some of the same tax avoidance means” and if GuySuCo is to be sustainable “these issues need to be addressed.”

“Some people at [the Guyana Revenue Authority] don’t know the difference and it is imported here and sold so far below our prices that we have to also be lowering because we do not want to lose our customers. We hear things like, ‘Well if I can get it cheaper at this or that body, what sense does it make buying from you?’” one GuySuCo executive explained.

It is to this end that the corporation has begun a series of engagements with the GRA and the other stakeholders about the issue.

Press Release: Members of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met on 22 May, 2019 in Belize, for their 170th Board of Directors Meeting.

DATE: May 28, 2018

Directors Members

Mr. L.PARRIS BARBADOS AGRICULTURAL MANAGEMENT CO.

Mr. M. MCLACHLAN BELIZE SUGAR INDUSTRIES LIMITED

DR. H. DAVIS GUYANA SUGAR CORPORATION INC.

Mr. R.K. JAMES SUGAR MANUFACTURING CORPORATION OF JAMAICA LTD.

170th Meeting of the Board of Directors – 22 May, 2018, Belize

Members of the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) met on 22 May, 2019 in Belize, for their 170th Board of Directors Meeting.

SAC Directors met in Belize City on 22 May to discuss the future of regional sugar supply. A year and a half after changes removed market preferences for CARICOM sugar in Europe; SAC is still looking for solutions within its own regional market. Sugar industries across the region are investing hundreds of millions of dollars to match quality and supply to regional demand.

Presently, more than two-thirds of sugar consumed in CARICOM comes from extra-regional sources, duty free, displacing market opportunity for over 200 thousand Metric Tons of CARICOM sugar, which is forced onto the low value global market. Policy changes, therefore, are required to secure the integration of the sugar market within the CARICOM Single Market & Economy (CSME). A failure to achieve this threatens a major agricultural sector of the region’s economy, hundreds of thousands of Caribbean jobs and questions the effectiveness of the single market in meeting its stated objectives.

CARICOM industries investments are set to deliver to market nearly 300 thousand Metric Tons of food-grade sugar within the next 18 months, matching the region’s demand. According to SAC Chairman, R. Karl James, “SAC Directors are squarely focused on how regional integration can benefit industrial users and consumers of sugar through competitive longer-term pricing strategies, which are not directly impacted by cyclical global sugar price surges.” James continued, “Utilisation of our sugar in most of our products would reduce this risk alongside the processing and import costs associated with importing sugar from outside the region. This would bring CARICOM in line with other regional sugar markets.”

The process now requires further discussion between sugar producers and users to find a pathway to achieve this mutually beneficial outcome. This is set to take place in the coming months. A part of the solution must be the correct implementation of the existing Treaty processes, in particular for brown sugar, which has seen a marked erosion of value in recent months. SAC members continue to dialogue with their respective governments, sugar users and the CARICOM Secretariat to find solutions.

CARICOM Market

Over the next 12-18 months, SAC industries would have the capacity to supply the Regional market with 280,000 tonnes of direct consumption and plantation white sugar. Investments are currently taking place to increase capacity. Additional lands are being brought into cane production that would increase sugar production. In one country, storage and shipping has increased to accommodate larger vessels of up to 30,000 metric tons.

Regional Sugar Production 2018/19

SAC members are projected to produce around 450 thousand metric tons of sugar this year.

European Union Market

To date the Region has exported 133, 000 tonnes of sugar to the EU market at global market prices. Extra regional duty free imports are being dumped into the CARICOM market at less than half the value they achieve in their home markets.

US Market

Industries will ship all of the quotas allocated by the US (43,175 ton) under the TRQ, representing less than 10 percent of production. At a recent meeting, industries requested and are expected to receive additional quotas for this 2018/19 marketing year.

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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

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

PRESS RELEASE: SAC SAYS CSME NOT WORKING FOR SUGAR

The Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) says the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) is simply not working for the regional sugar industry when the need is most critical. With the challenges facing CARICOM regional sugar producers, SAC has been gathering market intelligence across the region. Findings from that investigation have prompted SAC to urge the CARICOM Secretariat to take definitive and immediate action through the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) to address the valid concerns that Member States are failing to apply the Common External Tariff (CET) on sugar imports.

SAC market research indicates that more than two-thirds of CARICOM sugar demand is currently being supplied by extra regional sugar imports, despite the fact that CARICOM producers annually produce more sugar than the total regional demand. Additionally, this sugar is permitted to enter the CARICOM market—duty-free—under waiver or suspensions from CET. Furthermore, SAC has consistently advocated for changes to the current CET policy in order to mitigate this practice, which has displaced CARICOM regional sugar producers, who are forced to export their sugar elsewhere.

Equally disturbing, SAC market research indicates that the current CET policy is affecting the sale of CARICOM produced brown sugar. It has become evident in recent months that the brown sugar market opportunity—value and quantity—in CARICOM is rapidly shrinking. This is mainly attributable to imports of extra-regional brown sugar at pricing levels that SAC believes could not be supporting payment of the full CET. The blatant disregard for CET rules is now a distinct challenge to the survival of the CARICOM sugar industry, which supports the livelihoods of more than 400 thousand CARICOM citizens.

SAC will continue to press the CARICOM Secretariat to act with urgency in safeguarding the viability of the CARICOM sugar industry. SAC believes that anything less would amount to an abrogation of responsibility regarding the principles and functionality of the CSME.

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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

Email. karljam@gmail.com

William A. Neal

Communications, SAC

t +501 322-2150

m +501 610-9774

Email. william.neal@asr-group.com

SAC PRESS RELEASE POSITION PAPER

DATE: September 12, 2018

On 7 September, the Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC), representing CARICOM sugar producers, issued a position paper on the regional integration of the sugar market.

CARICOM sugar producers are responding to changing market dynamics, which traditionally saw most CARICOM produced sugar shipped to the EU for refining, while much of the region’s demand has been met by extra-regional imported sugar. The paper suggests that the 300K ton demand for sugar in CARICOM can easily be met by supply from the region’s industries which produce more than 450K tons of the sweetener annually. Currently around 200K tons of this demand is met from imports from non-CARICOM countries, which enjoy tariff-free access due to the differentiation of white and brown sugar under CARICOM rules.

The paper makes the argument that review of this market distortion can produce a win-win for CARICOM sugar producers, industrial users of sugar and consumers, by creating a regional market that offers a level playing field to those manufacturing sugar containing products, better and reliable access to regional sugar, matched by sugar industry commitments to produce the volume and quality required for the majority of production needs. It says that the market presently works for brown sugar, which is fully protected by the Common External Tariff, and has encouraged a vibrant competition among CARICOM producers, driving down prices. It can easily do so for all sugar needs as producers adapt their production to produce white and brown sugar to a high quality. The paper states that CARICOM sugar producers are at a disadvantage to many other regions which protect their own industries, permitting them to export their residual sugar at knock down global market prices. CARICOM producers currently have no such protection, nor access to markets offering preferential pricing on which to base investment to improve their efficiency.

SAC Chairman, Karl James said, “We see an exciting future for the regions sugar market – where Caribbean sugar meets the majority of Caribbean demand. It is time in the true spirit of the single market for Caribbean products to contain Caribbean ingredients – especially sugar, which has been the backbone of many CARICOM agro-industries for centuries.”

Guysuco (Guyana Sugar Company) Director Paul Bhim said, “Guyana has for many years provided sugar into the CARICOM market. We recognise the need to develop value-added products to meet demand. For that reason Guysuco will be investing in production of Plantation White Sugars (PWS).”

At a time when the functionality of the CARICOM single market is in question, sugar is a clear example of how the community can adapt to support its industries on which hundreds of thousands of Caribbean jobs depend. Godwin Hulse, Belize Agriculture Minister, echoing the views of other regional agriculture ministers said “It is time to get a handle on this issue if we are going to have a sugar industry moving forward. If the single market won’t work for sugar, it won’t work for anything.”

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Note to editors:

SAC now awaits the urgent convocation of the meeting of CARICOM sugar stakeholder group by the CARICOM Secretariat as mandated by COTED to share the position paper and its findings and engage with all relevant stakeholders. This is mandated to take place ahead of the next COTED meeting scheduled for November 2018.

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. karl.james@caribbean-sugar.org

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

PRESS RELEASE

CARIBBEAN SUGAR INDUSTRY LEADERS HIGHLIGHT BREXIT OPPORTUNITY IN LONDON, UK

Sugar Association of the Caribbean Board Members met with representatives from ACP Sugar producing countries on 6 July in London, to discuss future market access to UK, post-BREXIT.

Chairman of the ACP/LDC Group, Philip de Pass, outlined developments to date:

“EU reforms of the sugar market concluded last year have seen imports of cane sugar from traditional suppliers collapse.  They are already down 55% compared with 2017/18 and 74% compared with 2013/14.  ACP countries have been left substantially worse off than anticipated and the accompanying measures programme designed to help them has not had the desired impact.  BREXIT is a once in a lifetime opportunity for traditional suppliers to the UK to retain a share of their traditional market for sugar.”

Sugar Association of the Caribbean Board Representative, Mac McLachlan commented:

“CARICOM sugar producers are now faced with the prospect of the loss of opportunity to export to their largest historic market – the UK.   BREXIT offers UK policy makers an opportunity to support development partners in the Caribbean and wider ACP – and to create a level playing field for cane and beet refiners, where domestic production constraints permit a market environment which continues to provide UK consumers a continuing choice of cane sugar, or to lose this opportunity at the expense of some of the poorest farmers in the world.”

ENDS

PRESS RELEASE

JAMAICAN SUGAR FUTURE IS ‘PLANTATION WHITE’

At a government consultation with Jamaican Manufacturers and sugar producers convened in Kingston last Thursday with Minister Karl Samuda, Sugar Association of the Caribbean Chairman, Karl James, set out the many advantages for Jamaican manufacturers of using Jamaican ‘plantation white” sugar in their processes:

“Around the world most manufacturers use “plantation white” sugar to make soft drinks, cakes and biscuits.  It is a win-win – manufacturers have a local product on their door-step; can pay Jamaican dollars for it; and lock in prices protected from the world market for years ahead.   This is how the rest of the world operates – it is crazy to be importing sugar from Guatemala instead of somewhere 20 miles away.”

“To get companies to invest in ‘plantation white’ we do need a minimum of protection from dumped international white refined sugar which every 5-10 years is available on the world market at below the cost of production as part of the price cycle.   This destroys any reason to invest in Jamaican sugar if there is no kind of tariff protection in place.   We want competition between Caribbean producers to drive prices down and ensure quality and value for manufacturers.  We absolutely believe that this can work for everybody – after all it is how every other sugar producing country in the world manages the issue.”

ENDS

PRESS RELEASE

ISO – TIME FOR CARIBBEAN TO SUPPLY OWN SUGAR

The International Sugar Organisation (ISO) met in London last week for its annual conference on the global sugar sector.  Among the reports adopted at the conference, was a report by the ISO secretariat entitled: “The Caribbean Sugar Industry: Key Drivers and Outlook”.

Talking about the report, Secretary General of the International Sugar Organisation, Jose Orive said:

“CARICOM producers are now faced with huge disruption to their traditional markets in the EU because of long-expected EU sugar reform.  They urgently need to refocus on supplying domestic and regional markets in the Caribbean whilst working on their productivity and pursuing green energy generation such as ethanol production and cogeneration. Laser-focused implementation of national strategies for industry adaptation are paramount if the industry is to prosper again in the future.”

Sugar Association of the Caribbean (SAC) chairman, R. Karl James responded:

“Caribbean sugar producers across the region are successfully moving up the value chain to produce sugars which can be used directly by consumers and manufacturers.  White sugar suitable for 98% of all uses can now be produced within the region.  National strategies are in place for all of the key sugar industries.”

“We are now actively speaking with our local manufacturers who buy their sugar internationally to understand and meet their supply requirements through regional sugar production.  The regional industry in 2017 produced 417,000 tonnes of sugar, far more than estimated demand of 320,000 tonnes in the region.”  

“It seems crazy that the region is importing sugar from places like Colombia or Mexico which we can supply at home or right next door”. 

“Sugar can be a tremendous force for good – helping manufacturers to support the local economy and local jobs by sourcing their raw materials locally; helping countries cut down on their dollar import bills; and generating new cheap clean energy for local businesses and local people”.

ENDS