The Chronicle

Sugar code in jeopardy

- WORRIES: The Sugar Industry Code of Conduct, launched in April this year, is in danger of being disallowed unless a motion is withdrawn or voted down.

CANEGROWER­S urges Senators of all parties to speak up and reaffirm their support for protection­s for family farmers and maintain the stability of a $2.5 billion export industry.

The Sugar Industry Code of Conduct, launched in April this year, is in danger of being disallowed unless a motion introduced by NSW Senator David Leyonhjelm is withdrawn or voted down.

“We know there is wide support for the Code in Parliament,” Canegrower­s chairman Paul Schembri said.

“It is a vital safety net for our sugarcane farming members and must not be stripped away.

“The Labor Party, Liberals, Nationals and Greens have already acknowledg­ed the need for a Code through their roles in a Senate Committee investigat­ion into arrangemen­ts for the marketing of Australian sugar.

“It was the sole recommenda­tion in 2015 of the Rural and Regional Affairs Committee, chaired by WA ALP Senator Glenn Sterle, that a Code be developed and implemente­d for the sugar industry.

“We need all parties to reinforce their support and defeat Senator Leyonhjelm’s misinforme­d attempt to confuse the issue and put misguided ideology ahead of what is needed in the real world,” Mr Schembri said.

Distance and the perishable nature of cut cane means that growers have no choice but to supply their local mill, giving the mill owner a regional monopoly.

Requiring negotiatio­ns to be conducted in good faith with each party acting reasonably, fairly and honestly without intimidati­on, the Code prevents millers from abusing that monopoly power in supply contract negotiatio­ns with growers and their collective­s and provides a mechanism for arbitratio­n should there be a deadlock.

“The Sugar Industry Code of Conduct is something the parliament has dealt with and resolved through the Committee system,” Mr Schembri said.

“The parties involved supported the need for it and the Code was put in place in April 2017. We have moved on and are busy generating wealth for the Australian economy.

“We are about half-way through the 2017 sugarcane harvest which will see 32.5 million tonnes of cane cut and crushed into raw sugar with 80% of it to be exported.

“Canegrower­s members have $11 billion invested in this industry and our farms underpin an export product that secures the prosperity of regional communitie­s along 2,100 km of Australia’s east coast.

It is a vital safety net for our sugarcane farming members and must not be stripped away... — Paul Schembri

 ?? PHOTO: FILE ??
PHOTO: FILE

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