94-25622. Sugar and Crystalline Fructose Marketing Allotments  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 199 (Monday, October 17, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-25622]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: October 17, 1994]
    
    
      
      
      
                                                       VOL. 59, NO. 199
    
                                               Monday, October 17, 1994
    
    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Commodity Credit Corporation
    
     
    
    Sugar and Crystalline Fructose Marketing Allotments
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Credit Corporation, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This notice affirms the announcement made on September 29, 
    1994 by the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) that marketing 
    allotments have been established for sugar and crystalline fructose for 
    fiscal year 1995. The overall allotment quantity for sugar is 7,889 
    thousand short tons (TST). The beet sugar allotment is 4,355.5 TST 
    (55.2 percent), and the cane sugar allotment is 3,533.5 TST (44.8 
    percent). State cane sugar allotments and individual sugar beet and 
    sugarcane processor allocations are provided in this notice. The 
    marketing allotment for crystalline fructose is 159,757 short tons.
    
    DATES: The allotments apply to marketings from October 1, 1994 through 
    September 30, 1995, unless subsequently suspended.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert D. Barry, Director, Sweeteners 
    Analysis Division, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, 
    room 3739, South Agriculture Building, U.S. Department of Agriculture 
    (USDA), P.O. Box 2415, Washington, DC 20013-2415; or FAX to 202-720-
    8261; or telephone 202-720-3391.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Throughout its history the United States has been a net importer of 
    sugar. In order to support the domestic production of sugar beets and 
    sugarcane, Congress has mandated, continuously since 1981, that the CCC 
    provide price support for domestically produced sugar beets and 
    sugarcane. CCC has provided such price support by making nonrecourse 
    loans available, at minimum levels prescribed by Congress, to sugar 
    beet and sugarcane processors in accordance with the provisions of the 
    Agricultural Act of 1949, as amended (the ``1949 Act'') (See 7 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 1446g). In order to receive a price-support loan, an eligible 
    processor must agree to pay not less than the minimum price-support 
    levels specified by the CCC to all producers who deliver sugar beets or 
    sugarcane to such processor for processing. During fiscal year 1994, 
    three sugar beet processors declined to participate in the price-
    support loan program, in part to avoid the minimum grower payment 
    requirements, and two other sugar beet processors defaulted on price-
    support loans, resulting in 13,950 short tons of sugar pledged as loan 
    collateral being forfeited to the CCC.
        The national average loan rates for the 1994 crop year (i.e., July 
    1, 1994 through June 30, 1995) have not yet been published but are 
    expected to be the minimum rates allowed by statute. The loan rate for 
    raw cane sugar is expected to remain at 18 cents per pound, and the 
    loan rate for refined beet sugar is expected to increase, under the 
    statutory formula, by up to 40 points from the 23.62 cents per pound 
    loan rate for the 1993 crop year. The increase of the beet sugar loan 
    rate means that market prices will have to increase correspondingly in 
    order to avoid risks of price-support loan defaults and the forfeiture 
    of sugar collateral in fiscal year 1995. Since the minimum grower 
    payments are a function of the loan rate, an increase in the loan rate 
    also increases pro rata the minimum grower payment levels. Without an 
    increase of refined sugar prices, more sugar beet processors may elect 
    not to participate in the price-support program, thereby undermining 
    the purpose of the program to support the prices received by sugar beet 
    growers.
        Section 902(a) of the Food Security Act of 1985 (the ``1985 Act'') 
    requires that the President ``use all authorities available to the 
    President as is necessary to enable the Secretary of Agriculture to 
    operate the sugar program established under section 206 of the 
    Agricultural Act of 1949 at no cost to the Federal government by 
    preventing the accumulation of sugar acquired by the Commodity Credit 
    Corporation.'' Since the price-support levels mandated by Congress 
    generally are substantially above world market prices, import 
    restrictions have been primarily relied upon to maintain the domestic 
    price-support program at no cost to the Federal government. Currently, 
    additional U.S. note 3(a) to chapter 17 of the Harmonized Tariff 
    Schedule of the United States (HTS) authorizes the Secretary of 
    Agriculture to determine the total amount of sugars, syrups, and 
    molasses that may be entered at the low tier of tariffs under an import 
    tariff-rate quota which effectively limits sugar imports.
        Prior to enactment of the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and 
    Trade Act of 1990 (the ``1990 Farm Act''), the only mechanism available 
    to the Secretary to regulate the domestic price of sugar was the 
    tariff-rate quota. But the continued use of a restrictive quota had a 
    devastating effect on U.S. cane sugar refiners and the economies of 
    exporting countries. To alleviate these negative effects, the 1990 Farm 
    Act provided the Secretary of Agriculture with authority to establish 
    domestic marketing allotments in order to maintain the price of 
    domestic sugar without reducing imports below the minimum level--1.25 
    million short tons, raw value--deemed needed to allow refineries to 
    continue efficient operations. On August 6, 1994, the Secretary of 
    Agriculture modified the existing tariff-rate quota period for imports, 
    from the period October 1, 1992 through September 30, 1994 to the 
    period October 1, 1992 through July 31, 1994, and announced a new quota 
    period from August 1, 1994 through September 30, 1995 and a total quota 
    amount of 1,322,978 metric tons, raw value (1,458,333 short tons). 
    Effectively, this action means a monthly average of quota imports that 
    will total 1.25 million short tons in FY 1995.
    
    Establishment of Marketing Allotments
    
        The Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, as amended (the ``1938 
    Act''), requires that, before the beginning of a fiscal year, the 
    Secretary shall determine if marketing allotments for the fiscal year 
    for sugar processed from domestically produced sugar beets or sugarcane 
    must be established based on estimates of consumption, reasonable 
    ending stocks, beginning stocks, and production. Specifically, section 
    359b(a)(1) of the 1938 Act requires that the Secretary make estimates 
    of the following:
        (1) the quantity of sugar that will be consumed in the United 
    States during the fiscal year (other than sugar imported for the 
    production of polyhydric alcohol or to be refined and reexported in 
    refined form or in sugar containing products) and the quantity of sugar 
    that would provide for reasonable carryover stocks;
        (2) the quantity of sugar that will be available from carry-in 
    stocks or from domestically produced sugarcane and sugar beets for 
    consumption in the United States during the year; and
        (3) the quantity of sugar that will be imported for consumption in 
    the United States during the year (other than sugar imported for the 
    production of polyhydric alcohol or to be refined and reexported in 
    refined form or in sugar-containing products), based on the difference 
    between the sum of the quantity of estimated consumption and reasonable 
    carryover stocks and the quantity of sugar estimated to be available 
    from domestically produced sugarcane and sugar beets and from carry-in 
    stocks.
        Section 359b(b)(1) of the 1938 Act provides for the establishment 
    of marketing allotments for domestically processed sugar for a fiscal 
    year, if imports of sugar, based upon these estimates, will be less 
    than 1,250,000 short tons, raw value.
        The estimate of the quantity of sugar that ``would provide for 
    reasonable carryover stocks'' differs from the estimates of production, 
    consumption, and beginning stocks and from the estimate of actual 
    ending stocks, which are conventional predictions of supply and use 
    parameters, in that it is not a straightforward estimate of the 
    quantity of sugar that actually will be carried over at the end of the 
    fiscal year. By contrast, the estimate of ``reasonable'' ending stocks 
    is a policy determination of the quantity of unrestrained stocks that 
    is expected to result in market prices at least high enough to achieve 
    the goals of the no-cost price-support program for sugar beets and 
    sugarcane. Accordingly, the level of ending stocks which would be 
    ``reasonable'' must reflect that quantity that is necessary to achieve 
    the price-support objectives of section 206 of the 1949 Act as well as 
    the ``no cost'' mandate of section 902(a) of the 1985 Act, without 
    reducing import access below 1.25 million short tons.
        Similarly, the estimate of imports is not an estimate of the 
    quantity of sugar expected to actually be entered into the U.S. customs 
    territory during the fiscal year but rather the level of imports that 
    would be required to achieve the determined quantity of reasonable 
    ending stocks, based upon the statutory formula. Accordingly, the 
    import estimate indicates whether, in the absence of domestic marketing 
    allotments, the Secretary would be required to reduce the tariff-rate 
    quota amount to a quantity less than 1.25 million short tons in order 
    to achieve the desired level of reasonable ending stocks for 
    maintaining the price-support program at no cost.
    
    Estimates of Sugar Consumption, Stocks, Production, and Imports for 
    Fiscal Year 1995
    
        Pursuant to section 359b(a)(1) of the 1938 Act, the Secretary has 
    estimated the quantities of sugar consumption, stocks, production, and 
    imports in the United States (including Puerto Rico) for fiscal year 
    1995 as follows: 
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    TST, raw
                                                                     value  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Consumption..................................................      9,247
    Reasonable ending (carryover) stocks.........................      1,278
    Production...................................................      7,890
    Beginning (carry-in) stocks..................................      1,386
    Imports......................................................      1,249
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The current situation and outlook for sugar in fiscal year 1995 
    indicates that the probability of forfeiture of sugar pledged as 
    collateral for price-support loans would be high without allotments, 
    because estimated actual ending stocks are high and refined beet sugar 
    prices, which softened in mid-September, were likely to fall further 
    without allotments. Marketing allotments are expected to raise market 
    prices to levels which will provide effective price support and avoid 
    costs to the Federal Government. Any level of ending stocks at or above 
    1,279 TST determined to be ``reasonable'' would not trigger marketing 
    allotments and would very likely leave market prices depressed at 
    levels that would result in not achieving the price-support objectives 
    and cause forfeitures of sugar held as collateral under the price-
    support loan program. A determination of reasonable ending stocks of 
    less than 1,279 TST would trigger marketing allotments, which would 
    have the effect of raising sugar prices by reducing marketings of sugar 
    in fiscal year 1995. Therefore, a level of unrestrained ending stocks 
    of 1,278 TST would be reasonable in light of the objectives of the 
    sugar program of assuring an adequate supply of sugar to the U.S. 
    market while supporting domestic sugar beet and sugarcane growers and 
    also avoiding costs to the Federal Government. Accordingly, the 
    quantity of sugar needed to be imported into the United States during 
    the fiscal year in order to achieve such level of ending stocks would 
    be less than 1.25 million short tons, raw value, in the absence of 
    domestic marketing allotments.
    
    Establishment of Marketing Allotments for Crystalline Fructose
    
        Section 359b(c) of the 1938 Act provides that for any fiscal year 
    in which sugar marketing allotments are established, the Secretary 
    shall establish allotments for the marketing by manufacturers of 
    crystalline fructose manufactured from corn, at a total level not to 
    exceed the equivalent of 200,000 tons of sugar, raw value, during the 
    fiscal year.
    
    Overall Allotment Quantity
    
        Section 359c(b) of the 1938 Act provides that the Secretary shall 
    establish the overall allotment quantity of sugar by deducting from the 
    sum of the estimated sugar consumption and reasonable carryover stocks 
    for the fiscal year (1) 1,250,000 short tons, raw value and (2) carry-
    in stocks of sugar. This formula yields an overall allotment quantity 
    for sugar of 7,889 TST, calculated as follows:
    
    9,247 (consumption) + 1,278 (reasonable carry-over stocks) - 1,386 
    (carry-in stocks) - 1,250 = 7,889.
    
    Beet Sugar and Cane Sugar Allotments
    
        Pursuant to sections 359c (c) and (d) of the 1938 Act, the 
    Secretary must establish overall beet sugar and cane sugar allotments 
    by using percentage factors established in a fair and equitable manner 
    on the basis of past marketings of sugar, processing and refining 
    capacity, and the ability of processors to market the sugar covered 
    under the allotments. Section 359c(f) of the 1938 Act provides that the 
    cane sugar allotment shall be further allotted among the 5 States in 
    the United States in which sugarcane is produced (i.e., Florida, 
    Hawaii, Louisiana, Puerto Rico, and Texas) in a fair and equitable 
    manner on the basis of past marketings of sugar, processing capacity, 
    and the ability of processors to market the sugar covered under the 
    allotments. Section 359d(a) of the 1938 Act provides for the allocation 
    among processors of the State cane sugar allotments and the beet sugar 
    allotment after such hearing and on such notice as the Secretary by 
    regulation may prescribe, in such manner and in such quantities as to 
    provide a fair, efficient, and equitable distribution of the 
    allocations by taking into consideration processing capacity, past 
    marketings of sugar, and the ability of each processor to market sugar 
    covered by that portion of the allotment allocated to it. For purposes 
    of these divisions of the overall allotment quantity, past marketings 
    are based on the 1985-1989 crops, processing or refining capacity is 
    defined as the highest crop year production of the previous 5 years, 
    and ability to market is defined as the current crop year production 
    estimate.
        The 1938 Act is silent on the specific weights that should be 
    assigned to each factor but directs that the allotments and allocations 
    should result in fairness, efficiency, and equity. CCC regulations 
    governing the marketing allotments provide for the three factors to be 
    weighted equally or as determined appropriate by CCC for the fiscal 
    year. Equal weights were assigned to each of the factors when 
    allotments were instituted in FY 1993. However, experience gained 
    during the administration of the FY 1993 allotment program made it 
    clear that the use of equal factor weights could result in a 
    disproportionate share of the negative impacts of allotments being 
    placed on a relatively few processors, while other processors who were 
    also expanding production would incur little or no negative impact. Due 
    to this disparate impact, the allotments in FY 1993 also resulted in an 
    increase in refined sugar prices to levels in excess of those needed to 
    achieve the price support and no-cost objectives of the sugar program. 
    This experience indicated that CCC should adjust the weighting of the 
    three factors in light of the data available in order to achieve the 
    statutory goals of fairness, efficiency, and equity in allocating 
    market shares and to avoid driving prices for consumers and industrial 
    users to excessive levels. The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) and 
    the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) have also suggested that the 
    factors be weighted differently (e.g., weights of 10 percent for past 
    marketings, 30 percent for processing capacity, and 60 percent for 
    ability to market), based on the premise that sugar delivered to the 
    market by the most efficient processors will result in the lowest 
    prices for users and consumers.
        The use of equal factor weights for FY 1995 would again restrain 
    marketings by rather few processors and would be inappropriate to 
    ensure a fair, efficient, and equitable sharing of both the burden and 
    benefits of marketing allotments. Equal factor weighting would also be 
    likely to have a much greater price impact than necessary to achieve 
    price-support objectives. CCC has determined that it would be most 
    appropriate, given the relevant statutory purposes and the expected 
    market impact, to provide greater weight on ability to market (50 
    percent versus 33.3 percent) and less weight on past marketings (25 
    percent) and processing or refining capacity (25 percent). The 
    estimated restraint on beet sugar marketings would decrease from 
    approximately 195,000 tons, under an equal weighting scheme, to 144,000 
    tons. Constraining marketings by this amount is expected to have the 
    necessary price impact to deter forfeitures and sufficiently support 
    sugar beet prices while not contributing unnecessarily to inflation and 
    not unduly restraining a small segment of the industry.
    
    Establishment of Proportionate Shares
    
        Section 359f(b) of the 1938 Act provides that whenever a State cane 
    sugar allotment is established and there are in excess of 250 sugarcane 
    producers in such State, other than Puerto Rico, the Secretary is 
    required to determine, for each such State allotment, whether the 
    production of sugar, in the absence of proportionate shares, will be 
    greater than the quantity needed to enable processors to fill the 
    State's allotment and provide a normal carryover inventory, and, if so, 
    establish proportionate shares for the crop of sugarcane that is 
    harvested during the fiscal year the allotment is in effect. There are 
    in excess of 250 sugarcane producers in Louisiana, and the production 
    of sugar, in the absence of proportionate shares, is estimated to be 
    greater than the quantity needed to enable processors to fill the 
    State's allotment and provide a normal carryover inventory. 
    Accordingly, proportionate shares must be established for sugarcane 
    farms in Louisiana.
    
    Notice
    
        Pursuant to sections 359b(b)(1) and 359b(c) of the 1938 Act, the 
    Secretary of Agriculture has established allotments for the marketing 
    of sugar processed from domestically produced sugar beets or sugarcane 
    and crystalline fructose produced from field corn during fiscal year 
    1995. In addition, the Secretary has made the following determinations:
        1. The September 1994 estimate of the quantities of sugar 
    consumption, stocks, production, and imports in the United States 
    (including Puerto Rico) for fiscal year 1995 is as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    TST, raw
                                                                     value  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Consumption..................................................      9,247
    Reasonable ending (carry-over) stocks........................      1,278
    Production...................................................      7,890
    Beginning (carry-in) stocks..................................      1,386
    Imports......................................................      1,249
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        2. The overall allotment quantity for sugar is 7,889 TST.
        3. The percentage factors for the beet sugar and raw cane sugar 
    allotments are 55.2 percent and 44.8 percent, respectively. The 
    Secretary established the percentage factors for the beet sugar and 
    cane sugar allotments on the basis of past marketings of sugar (defined 
    as the average of marketings of sugar from the 1985 through 1989 crops, 
    excluding the highest and lowest years), processing and refining 
    capacity (defined as the highest year's production in the preceding 5 
    crop years), and the ability of processors to market the sugar covered 
    under the allotments (defined as the crop-year production estimate for 
    the fiscal year in which allotments are implemented). In order to make 
    the percentage factors fair, equitable, and efficient, the three 
    criteria were weighted 25 percent for past marketings, 25 percent for 
    processing and refining capacity, and 50 percent for ability to market. 
    The data used to determine the percentage factors are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               TST, raw value               
                              ----------------------------------------------
                                      Beet sector             Cane sector   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Past marketings..........  3,430                       3,341            
    Processing capacity......  4,408                       3,539            
    Ability to market........  4,500                       3,390            
      Average................  4,210 (55.2%)               3,415 (44.8%)    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        4. The beet sugar allotment is 4,355.5 TST.
        5. The cane sugar allotment is 3,533.5 TST.
        6. The State cane sugar allotments are:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   TST, raw 
                                                                    value   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Florida....................................................    1,687.380
    Hawaii.....................................................      773.180
    Louisiana..................................................      869.856
    Puerto Rico................................................       71.397
    Texas......................................................      131.650
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        7. Proposed marketing allocations for fiscal year 1995 for 
    domestically produced beet sugar and raw cane sugar by U.S. sugar beet 
    processors and sugarcane processors are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Thousand 
                                                                     short  
                                                                   tons, raw
                                                                     value  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Overall beet/cane allotments                            
                                                                            
      Beet sugar................................................     4,355.5
      Cane sugar (including Puerto Rico)........................     3,533.5
                                                                 -----------
          Total.................................................     7,889.0
                                                                            
                    State cane sugar allotments:                            
                                                                            
      Florida...................................................   1,687.380
      Hawaii....................................................     773.180
      Louisiana.................................................     869.856
      Puerto Rico...............................................      71.397
      Texas.....................................................     131.650
                                                                 -----------
          Total cane sugar......................................   3,533.463
                                                                            
               Beet processors' marketing allocations:                      
                                                                            
      Amalgamated Sugar Co......................................     847.446
      American Crystal Sugar Co.................................   1,039.146
      Great Lakes Sugar Co......................................      49.983
      Holly Sugar Corp..........................................     702.416
      Michigan Sugar Co.........................................     253.173
      Minn-Dak Farmers Co-op....................................     205.148
      Monitor Sugar Co..........................................     148.851
      Savannah (ADSEP DIV)......................................      28.286
      So. Minn. Beet Sugar Co-op................................     293.585
      Spreckels Sugar Co........................................     319.306
      Western Sugar Co..........................................     468.198
          Total beet sugar......................................   4,355.538
                                                                 -----------
                                                                            
               Cane processors' marketing allocations:                      
                                                                            
    Florida:                                                                
      Atlantic Sugar Assoc......................................     139.110
      Growers Co-op. of FL......................................     278.868
      Okeelanta Corp............................................     295.868
      Osceola Farms Co..........................................     188.340
      Talisman Sugar Corp.......................................     127.750
      U.S. Sugar Corp...........................................     657.444
                                                                 -----------
          Total Florida.........................................   1,687.380
    Hawaii:                                                                 
      Hamakua Sugar Co..........................................      77.805
      Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co............................     221.827
      Hilo Coast Processing Co..................................      46.001
      Ka'u Agribusiness Co......................................      52.067
      Kekaha Sugar Co...........................................      55.292
      Lihue Plantation Co.......................................      51.750
      McBryde Sugar Co..........................................      37.830
      Oahu Sugar Co.............................................      73.818
      Olokele Sugar Co..........................................      48.165
      Pioneer Mill Co...........................................      42.992
      Waialua Sugar Co..........................................      65.633
                                                                 -----------
          Total Hawaii..........................................     773.180
    Louisiana:                                                              
      Alma Plantation...........................................      38.327
      Caire & Graugnard.........................................       7.421
      Cajun Sugar Co-op.........................................      57.401
      Caldwell Sugars Co-op.....................................      33.229
      Cora-Texas Mfg. Co........................................      66.015
      Dugas & Leblanc...........................................      40.236
      Evan Hall Factory.........................................      45.468
      Glenwood Co-op............................................      33.478
      Harry Laws & Co...........................................      29.278
      Iberia Sugar Co-op........................................      38.739
      Jeanerette Sugar Co.......................................      45.969
      Lafourche Sugars Corp.....................................      41.936
      Louisiana Sugarcane Co-op.................................      60.270
      M.A. Patout & Sons........................................      99.484
      Raceland Sugars...........................................      57.058
      Savoie Industries.........................................      38.810
      St. James Sugar Co-op.....................................      40.099
      St. Mary Sugar Co-op......................................      43.656
      Sterling Sugars...........................................      52.982
                                                                 -----------
          Total Louisiana.......................................     869.856
    Puerto Rico:                                                            
      Coloso....................................................      22.899
      Mercedita.................................................      18.039
      Plata.....................................................      12.831
      Roig......................................................      17.628
                                                                 -----------
          Total Puerto Rico.....................................      71.397
    Texas:                                                                  
      Rio Grande Valley Sugar Growers...........................     131.650
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        8. The overall allotment in fiscal year 1995 for the marketing of 
    crystalline fructose manufactured from corn is 159,757 short tons. 
    Allotments will be established for the two U.S. manufacturers of 
    crystalline fructose, and they will be notified of such allotments by 
    certified mail.
        9. There are in excess of 250 sugarcane producers in Louisiana, and 
    the production of sugar, in the absence of proportionate shares, is 
    estimated to be greater than the quantity needed to enable processors 
    to fill the State's allotment and provide a normal carryover inventory. 
    Therefore, as required the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, as 
    amended, proportionate shares on acreage of sugarcane that may be 
    harvested in Louisiana for sugar or seed are established for the 1994 
    crop of sugarcane, in an amount equal to 108.57 percent of each farm's 
    sugar acreage base.
    
        Signed at Washington, DC this 12th day of October, 1994.
    Bruce R. Weber,
    Acting Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation.
    [FR Doc. 94-25622 Filed 10-12-94; 2:57 pm]
    BILLING CODE 3410-05-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/17/1994
Department:
Commodity Credit Corporation
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
94-25622
Dates:
The allotments apply to marketings from October 1, 1994 through September 30, 1995, unless subsequently suspended.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: October 17, 1994