IP/07/103
Brussels, 29 January 2007
Commissioner Fischer Boel calls for
substantial preventive withdrawal from the sugar market to avert probable
surplus
The European Commission today took the first steps
in a process towards a substantial withdrawal of quota sugar from the market, in
order to avoid a significant surplus at the end of the season. Withdrawal means
a temporary reduction in the amount of sugar producers can produce under their
quota. As such, a proportion of the sugar produced in the 2007/2008 marketing
year will either have to be counted against the quota for 2008/2009 or be sold
as out of quota sugar for industrial use, i.e. for bioethanol, chemical industry
etc. The Commission believes that a provisional figure for withdrawal of at
least 2 million tonnes, i.e. corresponding to 12% of the quota, will be
necessary. It will make a proposal to the Management Committee in February for a
Commission Regulation fixing such a provisional figure. A definitive figure will
be set later this year towards October, once the Commission has a clearer
picture of the harvest and production of sugar.
Commenting on the decision, Mariann Fischer Boel, Commissioner for
Agriculture and Rural Development, said: "On several occasions, and in
particular at the Council in November and December, I alerted sugar operators
and Member States to the risks arising from a failure to reduce production
quotas under the terms of last year's reform. My main concern was that the
Restructuring Fund, which was established to help unprofitable producers to
leave the sector, was not being allowed to operate as intended and that too few
companies were benefiting from its existence. I have been quite clear that
unless much more quota was renounced, the consequences would be serious for
everyone."
On the eve of the deadline for this year's applications to the Restructuring
Fund, it is confirmed that abandonment of sugar quotas for 2007/2008 will not
exceed 650 000 tonnes. As a result, the market oversupply for 2007/2008 is
expected to be very substantial.
As a result, the Commission will make use of Article 19 in the basic
Regulation 318/2006. It is clear already today that a substantial withdrawal
will be necessary to address the serious market imbalance. It is important to
announce this initiative to sugar producers and beet growers at this early stage
so that the industry can plan for the coming growing season and the contracting
process, at a time when decisions on sowing are imminent. There will be less
room for sugar under quota for the production year 2007/2008.
Separately, Commissioner Fischer Boel has asked her services to analyse the
situation with regard to the Restructuring Fund with the purpose of making it
more efficient and to ensure that sufficient quota is renounced by the industry
in the coming years. The main objective must be to avoid a simple linear cut at
the end of the restructuring period to the detriment of the sustainability of
the whole sector.