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    Showing posts with label Sugar. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Sugar. Show all posts

    58 mills agree to sell sugar to TCP

    July 19, 2013
    Some 58 sugar mills have expressed willingness to sell the commodity to the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP). Following the directives of federal government, on July 3, 2013, TCP floated a tender for purchase of 50,000 tons of sugar from local mills as they are facing some financial issues following slow sales in the domestic market. 58 mills agree to sell sugar to TCP
    Accordingly, the tender was opened on Thursday and as many as 58 parties shown interest in selling sugar to government owned grain trader. As per the tender terms and conditions, the bidders were required to quote bids for a minimum quantity of 2,000 tons and maximum 5,000 tons.
    All 58 mills have offered bids for different quantities and rates ranging from Rs 48,150 to Rs 60,000 per ton. However, so far no bid is accepted as the evaluation process of received bids is under process, after which, the price evaluation committee/tender award committee will review the quoted prices and finalise the deal. Sources said the received bids are valid for 15 working days and it''s enough for TCP to finalise the sugar procurement with suitable bidder.
    The Economic Co-ordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet has already allowed TCP to apply price matching formula on sugar procurement tender, therefore it is likely that the price evaluation committee will offer other bidders to match the lowest price. Sources said overall TCP will procure some 100,000 tons of sugar from domestic mills and the second tender for the purchase of 50,000 tons of sugar from domestic mills has also been issued with opening date of August 2, 2013.
    Source: Business Recorder

    Indian sugar gains brief window for exports

    July 04, 2013
    A lack of Pakistani sugar available for export and strong demand before Ramazan have created opportunities for Indian sales to nearby markets, but the window for foreign sales risks closing soon. Ramazan starts on July 9 and is followed by three days of celebration after it ends on August 7. As it passes, the associated demand for sugar will dwindle and India''s domestic consumption for festivals will rise, driving Indian prices up above levels that would be competitive abroad. Indian sugar gains brief window for exportsReversing a trend for imports, traders this week reported Indian white sugar export deals totalling 75,000 tonnes in July, stoked by a weak rupee and strong demand in the Gulf and Africa linked to Ramadan. Indian mills have chances to sell to markets such as Sri Lanka partly due to dwindling supplies of Pakistani sugar.


    "Mills in Pakistan have very little quantity to offer," said Muhammad Najib Balagamwala, chairman of Karachi-based SeaTrade group. He said nearly three-quarters of an allowed 1.2 million tonnes had been exported from Pakistan. "For the remaining quantity, deals have been signed and registered with the state Bank of Pakistan," he said. "If some deals get cancelled, then other exporters will get permission to export that much." Pakistan was expected to return as an important exporter next season as the outlook for next year''s crop looks favourable, dealers said.

    TIGHTROPE "Indian exporters are walking a tightrope," said Kamal Jain, managing director of brokerage Kamal Jain Trading Services. "Going ahead it would be very difficult to sign new deals." A senior London-based analyst with a trade house said he was surprised to hear of recent Indian export business. "The domestic market is paying more than the world market could or should be paying," the analyst said.
    An exporter based in Mumbai, who sold a few cargoes to Sri Lanka for July shipment, saw limited scope for Indian exports in coming months. "The maximum, I think, India can sell would be 50,000 tonnes more in the next two months. From August onwards local prices will start rising. We have festivals," he said. "Then it would be difficult to convince mills to sell sugar at lower prices to exporters."
    "In the last week of June, the weak rupee, falling local prices and strong demand due to Ramadan allowed sugar mills to strike a few deals," the exporter said. "Pakistan''s absence from the market also gave a boost. Pakistan was selling sugar at very low prices. It sold even at $470 per tonne. India can''t do that. Local prices in India are higher than that." Some Indian millers are not prepared to sell below $480 per tonne, trade sources said.

    Source: http://www.brecorder.com 

    Ban imposed on release of inland subsidy on sugar export

    MUSHTAQ GHUMMAN
    Caretaker Minister for Commerce and Textile Industry, Maqbool H H Rehmatoola has reportedly imposed a ban on release of inland subsidy on export of sugar as well as the subsidy under the Strategic Trade Policy Framework (STPF) 2009-12 and 2012-15, well informed sources told Business Recorder.
    The Economic Co-ordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet, under the three-week long leadership of former Finance Minister, Saleem Mandviwalla, approved billions of rupees of financial incentives for politically influential sugar industry under the guise of inland subsidy on a summary moved by the Commerce Ministry.
    Ban imposed on release of inland subsidy on sugar export
    However, the decision, considered questionable could not be implemented; several decisions taken by Saleem Mandviwalla are currently being heard by the Supreme Court of Pakistan. "Commerce Minister believes that the amount of inland subsidy can be used in elections, which is why he imposed a ban on the release of the amount under this head," the sources added.
    Likewise, processing of cases of release of subsidy to exporters as announced in STFP is to be discontinued by the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP). The Minister feels that TDAP should not release any amount under that head as it would be considered against the directives of Election Commission of Pakistan. The officials in TDAP and Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP), who intended to expedite cases of sugar mill owners and exporters for release of subsides were likely to be disappointed with that decision, said an official on condition of anonymity.
    The sources said ECC in its meeting on March 6, had approved inland subsidy of Rs 1.75 per kg on 1.2 million tons of sugar. Earlier, the ECC meeting presided over by former finance minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh had approved Rs 8 billion incentives on export of 1.2 million tons of sugar on summaries prepared by the Commerce Ministry and the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).
    However, SRO issued by the FBR favoured only sugar mills of Sindh zone. According to sources, Punjab produces 60 percent and KP 10 percent of overall sugar output in the country. The exclusion of both provinces has been strongly lamented by the industry as the SRO only favours one province. This SRO is being challenged in the court as discriminatory in nature and the major quantum of growers'' payments relates to Punjab. If KP and Punjab mills try to export through Karachi Port for destinations other than Afghanistan and CIS, it costs over 20 dollars in terms of haulage and it is practically impossible to export. According to sources, Secretary Finance Dr Waqar Masood has decided that the issue of release of inland subsidy should be left to the new elected government.
    Source Business Recorder

    Pakistan and Tajikistan Sugar Trade

    Pakistan & Tajikistan Sugar TradeTajikistan has set new conditions for the import of sugar from Pakistan and now it is seeking a price of $20 less than international market instead of already agreed price. For last eight months, Pakistan and Tajikistan are negotiating to mature a sugar export deal, however, the deal is still pending despite several correspondences.
    Sources told Business Recorder on Monday that once again Tajikistan has declined to accept Trading Corporation of Pakistan''s (TCP) commercial agreement for export of 30,000 tons white crystal sugar and has set some new conditions for the import of sugar. Following refusal of TCP''s commercial agreement, much awaited sugar export deal between Pakistan and Tajikistan has been further delayed. About one month back, amended commercial agreement for export of sugar was sent to Tajikistan officials for their signature. The second commercial agreement was drafted in consultation with Tajikistan and as per their demand Pakistan had agreed to supply sugar in three tranches instead of a single tranche of 30,000 tons.
    However, now Tajikistan has declined to accept TCP''s second commercial agreement as is not willing to procure complete quantity of sugar through three consignments, sources said. Instead of accepting and signing commercial agreement sent by TCP, Agency on State Material Reserves of Tajikistan has asked TCP to reduce the agreed price of the commodity and minimise the consignment quantity by 50 percent.
    In recent correspondent with TCP, Tajikistan''s procurement agency has refused to get supply of 10,000 tons in three tranches and now seeking sugar procurement in six phases. "Now, Tajikistan has requested for supply of sugar in six tranches with each tranche of 5,000 tons. At the same time, they are demanding a price of $20 less than international market instead of already agreed price of $528 per ton," they added.
    In the second week of August last year, in the presence of Minister for Commerce Makhdoom Amin Fahim and Nurmahmad Akhmedov Chairman Agency on State Material Reserves of Tajikistan, Pakistan and Tajikistan reached a sugar export deal, under which Pakistan will supply 30,000 tons of white refined crystal sugar to Tajikistan at a discount price, which will be some $20 lower than international market. A price of $528 per ton was fixed for export as at the time of negotiations international price stood at $548 per ton.
    With Tajikistan''s new demand, much awaited sugar export deal between two countries has further delayed and now it is being expected that sugar export deal will take some months to mature, sources said. Talks for export of sugar to Tajikistan are in process for last eight months, but continued to delay due to some disputes.
    Earlier, there was some confusion on the transportation expenses and later the variety of sugar as during the initial talks, Tajikistan had agreed to import white refined crystal sugar, while later it demand powdered sugar, which is costlier than crystal sugar. TCP has already made all arrangements to start sugar export to Tajikistan and some 30,000 tons of stocks of white crystal sugar have already been allocated for export purposes.
    Source: Business Recorder

    Are The USDA & FDA Influenced By Outside Agencies When Approving GMO (Zombie Food) Crops?

     

     
    Many corporations have gotten good at pulling the levers of government to tilt the odds in their favor, weakening regulations or securing perks, justified or not, to further their business interests. Economists use the term "regulatory capture" to describe the phenomenon whereby regulatory agencies serving the public instead end up advancing the interests of the companies they regulate. The main way companies accomplish this, economists theorize, is through lobbying and campaign contributions that convince legislators to pass laws in their favor.
    Once those laws are passed, however, it's less clear how companies sway the regulatory agencies that enforce them, which are more isolated from the direct effects of money or persuasion. "If a company can get enough farmers to support the product and they write letters, then the USDA is going to listen."
    "Traditional theories of regulatory capture cannot be used the same on agencies," contends Shon R. Hiatt, an assistant professor at Harvard Business School. "There are a lot of checks and balances and firewalls in place."
     
    So how are these agencies influenced?
    Hiatt, who grew up on a dairy farm in Idaho, began asking that question through research on the controversial issue of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), agricultural products that are genetically altered to increase yield, incorporate pesticide properties, or exhibit other beneficial qualities. (Calgene's Flavr Savr tomato was the first genetically modified product to come to market, in 1992.) However, the organisms also potentially carry health and environmental risks. After reading about these dangers, Hiatt wondered how the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) decides which GMOs to approve—and how agribusiness influences the process.
    Traditional theories break down
    As Hiatt began investigating, he found that traditional theories of capture such as lobbying and campaign contributions had little effect on whether any particular GMO was approved. Even more direct means of influence such as scientific articles funded by industry or letters written by industry-friendly congresspeople were equally ineffective.
    What did seem to affect the approval process, however, was the influence of third-party groups separate from Congress and industry, to which the department looked to justify its decisions.
    We may think the primary goal of agencies such as the USDA is to protect public health and safety; based on previous economic theory, however, Hiatt started with a different assumption—the primary goal of an agency is really to protect its own legitimacy. After all, it's the perception of an agency's effectiveness by Congress and the White House that will determine its budget and the career trajectory of its top officials. Of course, there is an overlap between the appearance of doing a good job and actually doing one. "If the USDA weren't doing its job, it would have very little legitimacy," says Hiatt. But that subtle difference in perspective also has the potential to distort the agency's reliance on pure science in its approval of GMOs.
    In his working paper "Lords of the Harvest: Third-Party Signaling and Regulatory Approval of Genetically Modified Organisms, written with Sangchan Park, an assistant professor at the National University of Singapore, Hiatt identifies two types of legitimacy important to the USDA. The first, "consequential" legitimacy, is the perception that the process produces effective results; the second, "procedural" legitimacy, is the perception that it is fairly following the rules of the process. In both cases, the researchers found that the department looked to outside stakeholders in order to establish that legitimacy.
     
    In the case of consequential legitimacy, Hiatt and Park found a strong influence of farmers associations, such as the Iowa Soybean Association or the Kansas Corn Growers Association, which have the power to judge whether the GMOs are performing as intended without side effects. While these groups might have some industry members, they are separate from the agribusiness companies that are introducing GMOs. In cases where they supported a particular organism, there was an 84 percent increase in the likelihood of approval.
    "If a company can get enough farmers to support the product and they write letters, then the USDA is going to listen to that and say, 'We have to keep our stakeholders happy,' " says Hiatt.
    Other agencies influence approvals
    In the case of procedural legitimacy, the researchers found a strong influence from an unlikely source—the USDA's sister agency, the Food and Drug Administration. In the process of approving GMOs, companies have the option of consulting with the FDA to design nutritional labels for their products, earning a certificate of approval when they address FDA concerns. "They get these consultations and they are somewhat meaningless—they have little to do with the USDA approval process," says Hiatt.
    Regardless of that fact, however, Hiatt and Park found that a positive endorsement by the FDA had a huge effect on USDA approval, increasing the likelihood by 157 percent.
    Hiatt hypothesizes that in addition to receiving nutritional information on the GMOs, getting the green light from another agency might help insulate the department from criticism. "The USDA could be looking for a scapegoat," he speculates. "A positive signal from a fellow bureaucratic actor could diffuse the blame and provide political cover were the department to approve a faulty product."
     
    These effects seemed to be even higher during instances where there was significant controversy or uncertainty. In cases where there were protests by activists over a particular GMO, the researchers found that the overall percentage of approvals went down, but the degree to which a positive endorsement by farmers associations increased the likelihood of approval by 117 percent. Results were even starker during a congressional election year, in which a heightened political environment presumably casts more scrutiny on agency decisions.
     
    In those cases, farmers associations' influence increased the likelihood of approval by a whopping 400 percent. In addition to increasing the likelihood of approval, says Hiatt, third-party endorsements shorten the approval period. With farmers' approval, agricultural companies shaved about 162 days off the average approval time; with FDA consultation, they cut it down by about 257 days. That can translate to big bucks for companies.
    "The average seed company earns about $2 million per day of revenue for high- selling GMO crops such as soybeans," notes Hiatt. "That's a substantial amount."
    He stresses that these findings only concern the USDA, and only GMO approval; more research is necessary to determine whether the effect of third-party stakeholders on the USDA has an effect on other agencies or other policy issues. Conceivably, the same findings could hold true for other agencies: for example, the influence of doctors associations on the FDA drug approval process or consumer bureaus on rate increases by public utilities commissions.
    Regulators must recognize influencers
    To the degree these third-party stakeholders do have influence, it complicates the traditional models of regulatory capture. On the one hand, it is perhaps a relief for democracy if companies don't have such direct influence on the process. On the other, it opens up the possibility that firms could capture these third-party actors instead—for example, drug companies influencing doctors with incentives for prescribing drugs or sponsoring medical conferences.
    Perhaps the larger lessons from Hiatt and Park's research, however, concern regulators themselves. It's important that agencies such as the USDA realize their susceptibility to these outside influences, less they short-circuit their reliance on scientific procedures. That is just what happened with the approval of GMO alfalfa and sugar beets: both received positive signals from farmers and the FDA, and were approved by the USDA. But environmental groups protested that these products were approved without a full environmental review, successfully suing to take them off the market. (Alfalfa was subsequently reapproved after a multi-year delay. Sugar beets are still pending approval.)
    "Regulators need to be aware of the influence they are putting on these stakeholders and other regulatory agencies," says Hiatt. "In those cases, it's even more important they follow the same scientific procedures they usually do. If they find themselves cutting corners, they could run into problems." - Michael Blanding
     
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