By GERALD ANDAE, gandae@ke.nationmedia.com
Kenya’s import quota for sugar from the Common Market
for East and Southern Africa (Comesa) will be reviewed in June when a
key committee meets to draw a formula based on needs.
The move is meant to curb the abuse of quotas that has
created a loophole for unscrupulous traders to dump duty-free sugar in
the market, hurting the local industry.
“The technical working committee should be convened
not later than June 30, to thoroughly deal with a formula for
allocating country-specific quotas,” reads the statement from Comesa
council of ministers.
Under the Comesa safeguards, Kenya was allocated
300,000 tonnes of the sweetener from Comesa states annually to bridge
the deficit created by insufficient production but the country only
consumes a quarter of the given quota.
Since 2002, Kenya has been enjoying the safeguards
that restrict entry of cheap sugar in the country to prevent unhealthy
competition with local firms as the cost of production in the country
remains high at Sh92,345 ($1,000) per tonne compared to other states
like Mauritius where the same costs Sh36,938 ($400).
A solution is yet to be found on how to lower the
local costs of production. The Kenyan sugar sector was recently given a
one-year extension of the existing safeguards subject to a review and
renewal for another one year. The decision was made by the council of
ministers in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The extension will operate on the basis of the
terms and conditions that the sugar industry in the country was given in
2007 as a prerequisite for the extension. These included privatisation
of state-owned millers, doing research into new early maturing and high
sucrose content sugarcane varieties and adopting them, and paying
farmers on the basis of sucrose content instead of based on weight.
In making the decision, the council said Kenya had
made some progress in meeting the conditions saying the Parliament had
approved privatisation of the five public sugar companies. However, it
is not known when the actual privatisation will take place, having been
postponed several times.
Flooding of cheap sugar in the market has often
subjected millers to losses as their commodity cannot compete with the
imported one, forcing them to lower the cost for them to make sales.
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