Duty-free import of 500,000 tonnes raw sugar till June 12

At present, India levies an import duty of 40% on sugar

Sanjeeb Mukherjee & Rajesh Bhayani  |  New Delhi/Mumbai 

Sugar
Sugar

of 500,000 tonnes raw till June 12

At present, India levies an duty of 40% on sugar

Sanjeeb Mukherjee & Rajesh Bhayani
New Delhi/Mumbai, 6 April

The central government on Wednesday allowed of 500,000 tonnes of raw to maintain local prices at reasonable levels.

At present, India levies an duty of 40 per cent on The will be allowed under a Tariff Rate Quota till June 12. The (DGFT) issued a public notice late on Wednesday that applications will have to be made to three zones — east, west and south — for allocations. 

The shall be done with zonal quantity restrictions and will be open to only millers and refiners having own refining capacity. Applications for must come online to from April 13 to 24.

“Considering the quantity of available as opening stocks and production in the current season, it is estimated that there is adequate quantity for domestic consumption,” said Food Minister Ram Vilas Paswan.

The industry seemed divided over the decision, with a section welcoming it on the ground that calibrated will help check price rise. Others felt was not needed, as domestic supplies were adequate.

“Allowing of 500,000 tonnes will help keep prices stable and mills will continue to get an average price above cost of production. At today’s price, if raw is imported, refined will, considering all expenses, cost Rs 31,800 a tonne,” said Praful Vithlani, chairman, All India Trade Association.

graph

 
The price includes cost, port charges, freight from port to refinery and polarisation/conversion cost, and even cost of financing for three months. It is an average of Rs 4,000 a tonne lower than current charges. The cost is low because global prices have seen a sharp fall in recent weeks.

Millers and refiners will have to submit details on letter of credit to the zonal authorities and applications for separate zones have to be made separately to the respective zonal authorities. If the allocated quota is not utilised, the applicant will have to face a penalty, according to the notification. 

Global prices jumped a little more than three per cent in early trade on of the India decision. Last year, India exported a little over 1.6 million tonnes (mt).

Sarita Reddy, president of the Indian Mills Association, said the body believed there was no need to “Nevertheless, we had also submitted that if the government still decides to import, not more than 4-500,000 tonnes may be needed and domestic millers be given the opportunity. It is heartening that the government has decided to give a chance for domestic millers to ..This will also stop any unnecessary speculation in the market,” she said.

Traders believe with this till June, the new season beginning October will open with a carry-forward stock of 3.5 mt, more than the festival month consumption of 2.5 mt. “The Centre as of now is being cautious with the but might have to review its situation later,” they said.

The impact on consumption due to the Centre’s decision to stop the subsidy that it gave to states for distributing at ration shops will also need to calculated, to decide further on production in the 2016-17 season is likely to fall to 20.3 mt, down from 25.1 mt a year earlier, as drought hit output in several parts of Maharashtra. 

Local prices have risen eight percent from a year before, in expectation.

Duty-free import of 500,000 tonnes raw sugar till June 12

At present, India levies an import duty of 40% on sugar

The central government announced it was allowing import of 500,000 tonnes of raw sugar, at zero import duty till June 12, to maintain local prices at reasonable levels. At present, India levies an import duty of 40 per cent on sugar. The import will be allowed under a Tariff Rate Quota, whose terms will be decided by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT). The latter will issue a public notice declaring the quota for each importer. The import shall be done with zonal quantity restrictions and will be open for only millers and refiners having own refining capacity. Applications for import must come online to DGFT from April 13 to 24. "Considering the quantity of sugar available as opening stocks and production in the current season, it is estimated that there is adequate quantity for domestic consumption," said Food Minister Ramvilas Paswan.The sugar industry seemed divided over the decision, with a section welcoming it on the ground that calibrated import will help check ...

of 500,000 tonnes raw till June 12

At present, India levies an duty of 40% on sugar

Sanjeeb Mukherjee & Rajesh Bhayani
New Delhi/Mumbai, 6 April

The central government on Wednesday allowed of 500,000 tonnes of raw to maintain local prices at reasonable levels.

At present, India levies an duty of 40 per cent on The will be allowed under a Tariff Rate Quota till June 12. The (DGFT) issued a public notice late on Wednesday that applications will have to be made to three zones — east, west and south — for allocations. 

The shall be done with zonal quantity restrictions and will be open to only millers and refiners having own refining capacity. Applications for must come online to from April 13 to 24.

“Considering the quantity of available as opening stocks and production in the current season, it is estimated that there is adequate quantity for domestic consumption,” said Food Minister Ram Vilas Paswan.

The industry seemed divided over the decision, with a section welcoming it on the ground that calibrated will help check price rise. Others felt was not needed, as domestic supplies were adequate.

“Allowing of 500,000 tonnes will help keep prices stable and mills will continue to get an average price above cost of production. At today’s price, if raw is imported, refined will, considering all expenses, cost Rs 31,800 a tonne,” said Praful Vithlani, chairman, All India Trade Association.

graph

 
The price includes cost, port charges, freight from port to refinery and polarisation/conversion cost, and even cost of financing for three months. It is an average of Rs 4,000 a tonne lower than current charges. The cost is low because global prices have seen a sharp fall in recent weeks.

Millers and refiners will have to submit details on letter of credit to the zonal authorities and applications for separate zones have to be made separately to the respective zonal authorities. If the allocated quota is not utilised, the applicant will have to face a penalty, according to the notification. 

Global prices jumped a little more than three per cent in early trade on of the India decision. Last year, India exported a little over 1.6 million tonnes (mt).

Sarita Reddy, president of the Indian Mills Association, said the body believed there was no need to “Nevertheless, we had also submitted that if the government still decides to import, not more than 4-500,000 tonnes may be needed and domestic millers be given the opportunity. It is heartening that the government has decided to give a chance for domestic millers to ..This will also stop any unnecessary speculation in the market,” she said.

Traders believe with this till June, the new season beginning October will open with a carry-forward stock of 3.5 mt, more than the festival month consumption of 2.5 mt. “The Centre as of now is being cautious with the but might have to review its situation later,” they said.

The impact on consumption due to the Centre’s decision to stop the subsidy that it gave to states for distributing at ration shops will also need to calculated, to decide further on production in the 2016-17 season is likely to fall to 20.3 mt, down from 25.1 mt a year earlier, as drought hit output in several parts of Maharashtra. 

Local prices have risen eight percent from a year before, in expectation.
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