11 दिसंबर 2013
Govt nod on bailout package to sugar mills likely before X'mas
New Delhi, Dec 11. Government is likely to take a
final call before this Christmas on a bailout package for the
sugar industry that includes Rs 7,200 crore of interest-free
bank loans to pay dues to sugarcane growers, Food Minister K V
Thomas said today.
He also expressed concern about the slump in domestic
sugar prices that has not created cash flow and profitability
issues for sugar mills but led to pendency of cane payments to
growers.
Last week, the PM-constituted ministerial panel headed
by Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar recommended relief
measures to address the cash crunch faced by sugar mills
unable to pay higher cane prices this season. Mills are
saddled with dues of Rs 3,400 crore to growers.
Addressing the 79th annual general meeting of Indian
Sugar Mills Association (ISMA), Thomas said that very soon,
the Food Department would be moving towards giving immediate
relief to the industry as per the panel's recommendations.
Asked when the government would take final call on
proposed relief measures, he said: "Most probably before
Christmas...We are doing it fast."
"Our Department is preparing a note. Before taking (it)
to the Cabinet, we will again discuss in the meeting of the
informal group of ministries (GoM)," he told reporters on the
sidelines of an ISMA event.
Thomas said that it has been decided that loans worth Rs
7,200 crore would be provided by banks to the sugar industry
exclusively for payment of sugarcane to growers.
Banks will lend equivalent to the excise duty paid by
mills in the last three years, while the entire interest of 12
per cent would be borne partly by the Government of India and
the Sugar Development Fund, he said.
Mills would have to repay the loans in five years and can
avail of a moratorium on repayment in the first two years, he
added.
Besides interest free loans, the panel had also
recommended recasting of loans taken by mills as per Reserve
Bank of India norms, incentives to produce 4 million tonnes of
raw sugar and setting up of buffer stock, besides doubling
ethanol-blending in petrol to 10 per cent.
The sugar industry is facing financial problems due to
higher cost of production and lower sugar prices.
Adding to the millers' financial woes, Thomas said that
export of surplus sugar from India has become a difficult
proposition due to simultaneous glut in sugar production
globally.
To overcome this situation, the Food Minister said the
government is considering creating a sugar price stabilisation
fund to curb the long-term volatility in sugar prices.
He also suggested that the industry diversify its product
base. "They have to produce what the market wants. For
instance, the export market does not want our white sugar. The
demand is for raw sugar," he said, adding that production of
fuel ethanol is another potential area.
Despite steps taken to facilitate ethanol production, the
Minister agreed that there are procurement issues between the
sugar mills and oil marketing companies but assured mills that
the government is trying to settle them soon.
Noting that reducing the cost of sugar production by
cutting remuneration to farmers is not going to be
sustainable, Thomas suggested that the long-term solution lies
in increasing the productivity of sugarcane and the industry
should take a lead role in this area.
On adoption of sugar price sharing formula suggested by
the Rangarajan committee report, Thomas said the Karnataka
government has set up a board to advise and recommend cane
prices. Uttar Pradesh has also constituted a committee with a
similar mandate, while Maharashtra government is considering
to set up a board soon.
Stating that 2013 has been a watershed year for the sugar
industry, Thomas said that the government has withdrawn major
regulatory controls on sugar sale and laid the foundations for
its further liberation.
ISMA President M Srinivasan said the industry body has
not achieved "much success" even as it has engaged with state
governments to impress upon the need to link sugarcane price
with revenue realisation of sugar prices.
"If the state governments continue to fix irrationally an
unviable sugarcane price, we feel that we will be forced out
of this business very soon," he said.
With decontrolling sales side of sugar sector, the
government did not address the sugarcane pricing policy and
this has left the industry in conflict with farmers and state
governments, he said.
Srinivasan also said that the country needs to export 4
million tonnes in the next couple of years to ensure that the
surplus sugar stock is brought down to reasonable levels.
He also demanded that the government keep duty-free
import authorisation scheme in abeyance for two years or allow
sugar imports after two years and not earlier.
India, the world's second biggest producer, is estimated
to produce 24.1 million tonnes in the 2013-14 marketing year
(October-September), higher than the domestic demand of 23.5
million tonnes.
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