ISMA seeks ethanol allocation boost, sugar MSP hike in Budget expectations for policy support
New Delhi [India], October 29 (ANI): The upcoming Union budget for the financial year 205-26 (April-March) should revise the sugar MSP and restore ethanol allocations to avoid surplus sugar and payment delays, Niraj Shirgaokar, Vice President of industry body Indian Sugar and Bio-Energy Manufacturers Association (ISMA) told ANI on Wednesday.
He also urged balanced policies to ensure mill viability and safeguard farmers amid rising cane costs and reduced ethanol quotas.
"It should focus on revising the MSP of sugar and restoring ethanol allocations to ensure mills remain viable and farmers continue to receive timely payments."
ISMA is seeking policy and budgetary support to address what it calls the cascading impact of reduced ethanol allocations, surplus sugar, and rising cane prices.
"We have to request the government to increase our capacity because we have taken a lot of loans based on interest subvention," he said, adding that the association would "sit with the government to ensure this imbalance is corrected."
Shirgaokar said ethanol allocations dropped to 28 per cent, leaving mills idle, creating surplus sugar, depressing prices, and delaying cane payments.
He said, "FRP has gone on increasing, which is good for farmers, but mills must have the capacity to pay."
ISMA has also requested the government to "announce 2 million tonnes of sugar exports" to help balance the market.
"We exported almost 80-90% of the one million tonnes announced last year," he said. "If the export programme is announced earlier, especially before other countries like Brazil and Thailand enter the market, trade flows will come in our favour."
According to him, "Flex-fuel vehicles are also part of the green economy that we want to create in our country."
On the demand side, Shirgaokar said standards for E22, E25, and E27 ethanol blends "have been announced by the government through BIS," but "there has to be a demand side push through vehicles and pumps dispensing E25, E85, and E100 ethanol."
Deepak Ballani, Director General, ISMA, said, "We are committed to the welfare of farmers. Sugarcane farmers are perhaps the most comfortable--they get payments on time." He added, "We are working on better sugarcane varieties to enhance productivity and farmer income."
He said the government's achievement of E20 blending ahead of schedule "is commendable," but added that "capacities are now equivalent to E35." Ballani urged the government to "release a roadmap beyond E20" and promote "flex-fuel and smart hybrid vehicles with differential pricing similar to Brazil."
Shriram noted that "once the working capital of a sugar company gets exhausted by March-April, arrears begin to rise." He added, "It's time that the base price of sugar, the floor price, should be increased, commensurate with the cane price."
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