A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, May 9, 2015
Millions of farmers keep faith in sugar cane, shrug off poor returns
A labourer ties a bundle of sugarcane on a rickshaw to transport it at a
wholesale sugarcane market in Kolkata, India, May 4, 2015.-REUTERS/RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI
AHMEDNAGAR, INDIA | BY RAJENDRA JADHAV-Tue May 5, 2015
Millers have not paid up for his cane this year as falling sugar prices
have hit their income. But switching crops is not an option as prices
for most agricultural produce have dropped and forecasts for weak
monsoons have raised worries on yields.
With farmers like Patil staying put on cane fields, India is seen
producing excess sugar in 2015/16. A sixth annual surplus, the longest
such stretch ever, will allow the world's No.2 sugar producer after
Brazil to remain a net exporter, denting global prices that hit six-year
lows in March on ample supplies.
In the past, lower prices have prompted Indian cane growers to
switch to other crops, but given uncertainties about the monsoons this
year, farmers see more sense in staying with resilient cane than moving
to delicate crops.
"In changing weather conditions, sugar cane is more reliable than
others. You may get lower returns, but at least something is assured,"
said the farmer Patil from India's top sugar producing state,
Maharashtra, who is still owed nearly 50,000 rupees by a mill for cane
sold this year.
"In other crops you may not get anything if weather becomes erratic,"
said Patil, whose onion crop on two acres was damaged this year by
unseasonal rainfall in February.
Vivek Shinde, another cane farmer, agreed.
"Cane prices can't fall below a certain level, but that is not the
case with vegetables. They can rise to 100 rupees per kg or fall to 5
rupees," said Shinde, from Ahmednagar district, 250 km east of Mumbai.
Shinde should ideally get 2,500 rupees per tonne for cane as per the
price fixed by the central government, but millers have been paying him
40 percent less.
TAKING HEART FROM GOVERNMENT MEASURES
Cane farmers in India are, however, taking heart from recent
government measures, such as a subsidy for raw sugar exports and higher
import duties, aimed at helping the country's beleaguered mills as well
as its farmers.
Due to plunging domestic sugar prices, down 16 percent over the past
seven months, mills' financial health has been eroded to the extent that
they now owe more than $3 billion to cane growers for purchases made
since Oct. 1, 2014.
"The government measures are providing farmers hope that their
income will improve going ahead," said Pallavi Munankar, commodity
analyst at Geofin Comtrade.
Also, given the low cost of taking a second harvest from the stubs
of cane roots, known as ratoon, means farmers will stay with it,
Munankar added. Indian farmers usually take one ratoon crop as after
that yields begin to drop.
India's sugar output in 2015/16 could reach 25.7-26 million tonnes,
versus its demand for around 25 million tonnes, said Rahil Shaikh,
managing director of commodities trader ED&F Man Commodities India.
That would account for 15 percent of total global sugar output, almost
unchanged from this year.
With its recent surplus, India is set to start the sugar marketing
year in October with carry forward stocks of 9.5 million tonnes, the
Indian Sugar Mills Association said.
(Editing by Himani Sarkar)

