Bacolod: Sugar producers push August mill start

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Bacolod City – The Sugar Council, representing thousands of sugarcane farmers from three planters’ federations, asked the Sugar Regulatory Administration to reconsider starting the milling season on August, instead of September this year.

”Hectares of standing canes are due for harvest in August. A year ago, in June 2022, the national government urged us to start milling early. Many sugar farmers supported the call, milling 432,356 tons as reported by SRA. Consequently, the ratoon plants, estimated at 400,000 tons, are now mature, and delaying their harvest to September will cause them to become over-ripe, compromising purity and tonnage,” the Sugar Council pointed out in a statement.

Last year, five Negros mills started milling in August, with two mills commencing operations on August 8, in response to the national government’s call to mill the canes early because of the acute sugar shortage.

Now, the producers are looking forward to the start of milling this August, because the canes they planted after their early harvest last year are already ripe for milling.

In a letter addressed to Acting Administrator Pablo Luis Azcona, the Sugar Council appealed to SRA to continue with the previous practice of commencing milling operations in August.

The letter was signed by Confederation of Sugar Producers’ Associations Inc. (CONFED) president Aurelio Gerardo Valderrama Jr., National Federation of Sugarcane Planters (NFSP) president Enrique Rojas, and Panay Federation of Sugarcane Farmers (PANAYFED) president Danilo Abelita.

“The recent Typhoon Dodong, with its torrential rains and strong winds, caused mature canes to lodge. If left unharvested, the purity and weight of these distressed canes will suffer,” the Sugar Council stated.

Farmers fear that any delay in milling will lower the weight and sugar yield of the canes, resulting in lower sugar production and lesser returns for the farmers.

They also cited the need for fresh income by the producers, especially the small farmers, after months of no work on the farm.

In view of the early start of milling last year, milling operations finished earlier than usual. Numerous sugar mills stopped milling in April this year, instead of the traditional May up to June. Consequently, some sugar farmers have had no income from their farms since April.

Complicating the financial quandary of the sugar producers is the obligation to their farm workers, who have also been looking forward to getting back to work this August.

“Sugar farmers have already contracted cane cutters, and delaying milling to September will force them to financially support the workers or risk losing them,” the Sugar Council explained.

If milling starts on September 1, this will create an overwhelming demand for farm workers, which are already in short supply, and for hauling services of truckers. Farmers are apprehensive that this unprecedented demand for farm labor and hauling services will give rise to unhealthy competition, thereby driving up their production costs. (Gilbert Bayoran via The Visayan Daily Star (TVDS), photo courtesy of TVDS)

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