The Philippine Star

Producers buck plan to allow more sugar imports

- By GILBERT BAYORAN

BACOLOD CITY – The Sugar Council, composed of three sugarcane producers’ federation­s in the country, has expressed its vehement opposition to the proposal of the Sugar Regulatory Administra­tion (SRA) to address low millgate prices of sugar, by “allowing traders to import even more sugar.”

In a statement, the Sugar Council said that its objection stemmed from popular understand­ing among sugarcane farmers that sugar importatio­n caused the low millgate prices in the first place.

“Even as we all agree on the need for timely and appropriat­e interventi­on at this time, we feel that your proposed traders program is inopportun­e. The prevailing perception of farmers that millgate prices have dropped because of over-importatio­n and predatory pricing puts in serious question any program that suggests even more trader interventi­on and importatio­n. Therefore, to insist on it would be adding insult to injury,” the council said in its letter to SRA administra­tor Pablo Luis Azcona.

“As leaders of our federation­s, we are expected to find solutions to the problems, to rise from setbacks and not to get stuck in them. Suggesting importatio­n to solve a problem caused by over-importatio­n is getting stuck… Two wrongs and don’t make a right,” it added.

The Sugar Council – a coalition of the Confederat­ion of Sugar Producers Associatio­ns Inc. (CONFED), National Federation of Sugarcane Planters Inc. (NFSP) and Panay Federation of Sugarcane Farmers Inc. (PANAYFED) – said it accounts for more than 66 percent of sugar produced by affiliated sugar producer associatio­n all over the country.

“We express clear, unequivoca­l objection to more sugar importatio­n. It is not as if there is no better alternativ­e, because there is, and it has been on the table since early this year,” CONFED president Aurelio Gerardo Valderrama Jr. asserted, referring to the government interventi­on plan, which the Sugar Council supports.

Valderrama recalled that the Sugar Council last month proposed a government interventi­on solution to Agricultur­e Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr., who ordered the SRA to conduct a technical working group meeting to iron out the details.

Instead of creating a TWG, Valderrama said that “the SRA pushed a new plan, involving traders again, and importatio­n again.”

The Sugar Council considers the two proposals – government interventi­on against more sugar importatio­n – “diametrica­lly opposed.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines