With the country's sugar production in the 2006-07 (October-September) season likely to cross 27 million tonnes against the earlier estimate of 26 million tonnes, the government is actively considering creation of an additional sugar buffer stock of 3 million tonnes. This will be over and above the 2 million tonnes buffer stock created in March. |
"The food ministry has given an in-principle approval for the creation of an additional buffer stock and it will be shortly send for consideration to the Union Cabinet," said a senior industry official. |
The sugar will physically remain with the companies. The purpose behind the buffer stock will be to transfer the cost of carrying the commodity from the companies to the government. |
Initially when the government decided to create a 2-million tonne buffer stock in March, the official official estimate of sugar production for 2006-07 (October-September) season was only 22.7 million tonnes. |
However, with Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh making an upward revision in sugar output estimates, a need to increase the buffer stock was felt. The country has already produced 25 million tonnes of sugar by April. |
"The current season is likely to end with a production of about 27 million tonnes against last season's 19.2 million tonnes and a consumption demand of 19 million tonnes," said Vinay Kumar, managing director of National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories. |
The creation of a 5-million tonne buffer stock will provide some relief to sugar mills, which are incurring heavy losses owing to high production costs, said an executive of a leading sugar company. |
According to the international sugar organisation, the size of the projected global surplus in 2006-07 has increased to record 9.115 million tonnes against 7.2 million tonnes projected in February primarily due to bumper crops in Brazil and India. |
World sugar production has been revised upward by 2.418 million tonnes to a record 162.621 million tonnes. |