Title: GOVERNMENT OF JAMAICA
1GOVERNMENT OF JAMAICAS SUGAR ADAPTATION
STRATEGY by George Callaghan
- SUGAR TRANSFORMATION UNIT,
- MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE FISHERIES
- SUGAR CANE ENERGY FOR LIFE
2A Thought !
- Plan for what is difficult while it is easy, do
what is great while it is still small. -
- The Tao Te Ching
3The Sugar Industry Enquiry Commission
- A significant MILESTONE on the ROAD MAP to the
development of a sustainable private sector-led
sugar cane industry. - Best wishes for a successful conclusion!
4CONTENTS This presentation
- The Context
- The Jamaica Country Strategy JCS
- Status of Implementation
- Next Actions
- Critical Success Factors
- Questions/comments
5The context Year 2006
- The contribution of the sugar sector
- The ownership structure
- Performance indicators
- Challenges
- GOJs response
6The context Year 2006
- The contribution of the sugar sector to Jamaicas
economy - Foreign exchange earnings US 75 M,
- - 6 of value of total exports 51.7 of
agricultural exports in Y1998 - Employment
- Direct 38,000 persons in 32 political
constituencies is 18 of total employment in
Agriculture 4 of active labor force in
Jamaica - Indirect 100,000 persons, including 9,600
independent cane farmers
7The context Year 2006
- The ownership structure of the sugar industry
- Let us take a look!
8The context Year 2006
- 5 Government (71 ) Frome, Monymusk, Bernard
Lodge, Trelawny St. Thomas sugar estates - 2 Private (29 )
- Worthy Park estate
- Appleton estate
- 4 Private sector (57 )
- Appleton, Worthy Park,
- Golden Grove Sugar,
- Everglades Farms.
- 3 Government (43 )
- Frome, Monymusk, BernardLodge
9The context Year 2006
- Some key sugar industry performance indicators
- Next slide!
10The context Year 2006 Worse before better!
Performance Indicators Y 2006/7 crop Y 2008/9 crop
Cane yield, tc/ha 64.48 51.4
Tonnes sugar/ha 5.42 4.8
Cane production, M tonnes 1.95 1.35
Area harvested, ha 30,308 26,296
Tonnes cane/t sugar 11.97 9.01
Factory capacity, t sugar 257,000 207,000
Sugar production, t 164,387 126,381
Factory capacity utilization, 64 61
Price, / t cane 20 26
Cost, / t cane 20 20
11The context Year 2006
- Challenges to the sugar sector
- Reducing unit cost of production US0.26 to
below US0.17 per pound sugar - Increasing cane yields from an average of about
62 T/Ha to above 77 T/Ha NB.Average at Appleton
Est. (2001 -2005) was 67 T/Ha 82 T/Ha at Worthy
Park Est. - Increased capital investment at public sector
estates - 36 cut sugar export prices to EU
12The context Year 2006 GOJs response!
- GOJs response to the challenges facing the sugar
sector in Year 2005/6 - THE JAMAICA COUNTRY STRATEGY FOR THE ADAPTATION
OF THE SUGAR INDUSTRY 2006 TO 2015 The JCS
or GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy.
13The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- The JCS Discussion points
- The JCS and its Phases
- Three (3) strategic objectives of the JCS
- History of the JCS
- Programme management The STU
- Funding arrangements
- Status of implementation in Year 2010
- Next actions
14The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- The JCS Phases
- The Road Map to the development of a sustainable
private sector-led sugar cane industry by Year
2020 - Phase I 2006/7-2009/10
- Transition
- Phase II 2010/11-2014/15
- Transformation
- Phase III 2015/16-2019/20
- Consolidation
15The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- Goal of the JCS To achieve an effective
transition to a sustainable private sector-led
sugar cane industry over the period 2006 -2020.
16The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- Three (3) Strategic objectives
- 1. Development and maintenance of a sustainable
private sector- led sugar cane industry -
(Privatization) - 2. Strengthen the economic diversification,
social resilience environmental sustainability
of Sugar-Dependent Areas (SDAs) - (Sugar
Dependent Area Development) - 3. Maintain progress towards GOJs
macro-economic goals - (Debt reduction)
17The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- History of the JCS
- JCS (I) - Approved by Cabinet in 2005
- Implementation period Y2006 to 2015
- JCS (I) - Revised in 2009
- JCS (II) - Implementation period Y2006 to 2020
- JCS (II) - Approved for implementation by Cabinet
in Sept. 2009
18The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- Programme management by the STU
- The Sugar Transformation Unit, Ministry of
Agriculture Fisheries - Staffing Total 31, of which 28 Field based.
19The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy THE
STU
20The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- Funding arrangements for the STU
- European Union Accompanying Measures for Sugar
(AMSP) 97 - GOJ 3
21The JCS / GOJs Sugar Adaptation Strategy
- Status of implementation at the end of the
Transition Phase Year 2010 - Milestone Completion of divestment of all GOJ
sugar estates
22The JCS End of Transition Phase 2006 to 2010
Status report
- Divestment
- Restructuring
- Public Awareness
- Two GOJ sugar estates
- Redundancy payments at J 2.3 B made by GOJ.
Remaining three restructured taken off GOJ
budget Investors being processed in new
divestment round - Public Awareness Campaign in progress
23The JCS End of Transition Phase 2006 to 2010
Status report
- SDA development
- Maintaining access of displaced sugar workers to
basic health educational services - Relocation of residents of the sugar estate
Barracks - Upgrading selected informal settlements on estate
lands
- In place since redundancy exercise Dec. 08
- In progress Sub-Division plans for sites by
Sept. 10 - Plan being prepared by SCJ Holdings
24The JCS End of Transition Phase 2006 to 2010
Status report
- Eliminate annual debt load of GOJ sugar estates
- Estimated J20.0 B in accumulated SCJ debt
transferred to MOF PS
- Since 2008/9 crop GOJ sugar estates (Frome,
Monymusk, Bernard Lodge) are self-financing
(Eridania Tate Lyle Partial Pre-Shipment
Financing Agreements) - Debt-free sugar divestment
25The JCS End of Transition Phase 2006 to 2010
Status report
- Next action to complete the Transition Phase I of
JCS implementation is - Divest Frome, Monymusk Bernard Lodge before end
of calendar year 2010
26The JCS Phases Summary
- Phase I 2006/7-2009/10
- Transition
- Phase II 2010/11-2014/15
- Transformation
- Phase III 2015/16-2019/20
- Consolidation
27The JCS - Phase II 2010 to 2015
- Phase II - TransformationYear 2010/11-2014/15
- Let us take a look !
28The JCS - Phase II 2010 to 2015
- A reminder to you Phase II (Transformation)
- Objective 1 (Development of a commercially
viable sugar industry NOT DIVESTMENT!) - Development and maintenance of a sustainable
private sector- led sugar cane industry.
29The JCS - Phase II 2010 to 2015
- A reminder to you Phase II (Transformation)
- Objective 2 (SDA Development, not mitigation of
the fall-out from restructuring of the sugar
sector The Sugar Area Development Programme) - Strengthen the economic diversification, social
resilience environmental sustainability of
Sugar-Dependent Areas (SDAs).
30The JCS - Phase II 2010 to 2015
- A reminder to you Phase II (Transformation)
- Objective 3 (Creation of an enabling policy
environment. Not debt reduction) - Maintain progress towards GOJs macro-economic
goals.
31The JCS - Phase II 2010 to 2015 Transformation
- Objective 1
- Guidance to formulation of industry/sector
- plans
- to support the transformation of the sugarcane
industry into a vibrant commercially viable
sector, sustainable over the medium to long term
both financially and environmentally....
(profitability) - efficiently using Jamaicas natural and developed
advantages in sugarcane production ....
(efficiency) - capitalizing on the use of its physical and human
resources to respond to growing market
opportunities for downstream products derived
from efficient production and processing of
sugarcane to support industrial, employment,
energy, and environmental goals. (product
diversification)
32Phase II Objective 1 Commercial viability
- Some requirements for development of a
commercially viable sugar sector - Private sector investment in field and factory
technologies and market development - Enabling regulatory framework, acting on behalf
of Government as arbiter between the interests of
growers, input suppliers, field and factory
workers, processors, traders, marketing and
distribution agents, communities and the general
public - Improved access to product markets at home and
abroad - Industry run, market responsive, commercial
management framework covering cane supply and
pricing - Elimination of supply, production and marketing
constraints.
33Phase II Objective 1 Actions
- Completion of privatisation (FY2009/10)
- Access to new leasehold land for cane a)
estates, b) cane farmers - Review of regulatory framework, with primary and
secondary legislative amendment to support
streamlining and reform - Support for review of pricing and marketing
arrangements, introducing legislative or
regulatory amendments as appropriate
34Phase II Objective 1 Actions continued.
- Oversight of collective bargaining between
unions, growers, and estates - Removal of regulatory constraints, or other
difficulties in downstream product markets
through regulatory revision (e.g. energy
generation, sugar products, etc.) and negotiation
of international trade agreements - Support for investment to improve the viability
of cane production and processing, and to realise
macroeconomic, energy, and environmental
objectives through fiscal and monetary incentives
and mobilisation of donor support for
concessionary financing (CEF), RD funding,
training programmes etc. to stimulate activity in
the medium term - Improvements in public assets roads, irrigation
etc.
35The Future to Year 2015 ! Targets
- Objective 1 Development of a commercially
viable sector - INDICATIVE PRODUCTION TARGETS
- Sugar cane 3.5 M tonnes
- Raw sugar 200,000 t. (Export domestic)
- Molasses 134,000 t. (Rum)
- Ethanol 70 M. Liters ( E-10 gasoline)
- Bagasse Cogeneration of electricity
36The future to Year 2015 Performance indicators?
Performance Indicators Y 2006/7 crop Y 2008/9 crop Y 2015 Forecast
Cane yield, tc/ha 64.48 51.4 80.0
Tonnes sugar/ha 5.42 4.8 8.0
Cane production, M tonnes 1.95 1.35 3.5
Area harvested, ha 30,308 26,296 43,750
Tonnes cane/t sugar 11.97 9.01 10.0
Factory capacity, t sugar 257,000 207,000 207,000
Sugar production, t 164,387 126,381 200,000
Other products from cane Est. 105,000 t molasses for rum, ethanol. Bagasse for cogeneration
Factory capacity utilization, 64 61 96
Price, / t cane 20 26 20
Cost, / t cane 20 20 15
37Phase II Objective 2 SDA development
- Objective 2
- Guidance in the formulation of Sugar Dependent
Area/Community development plans - to support the sustainable development of the
sugar dependent areas at community, family, and
individual level, countering increased urban
migration by stimulating opportunities for
employment and income generation, improving
living conditions, raising the standards of
social services provision, and conserving the
environment for future generations.
38Phase II - Future to Year 2015 SDA development
- Objective 2 Expected results
- Economically viable and socially coherent rural
communities - Sustainable and expanding local economies with
expanding opportunities for employment and
income - Reduced vulnerability of communities and
households to the fortunes of the sugarcane
market - Younger generation motivated to remain in or
return to the rural areas - Improved opportunities for health care and
quality education
39Phase II Objective 3
- Objective 3
- Guidance to the formulation of GOJ plans for
sugar sector - Positively contribute to Government revenues
through corporate and personal taxes, duties and
tariffs - Reduce the burden of debt and debt servicing on
the state budget - Reduce vulnerability to external price
variations, keeping inflation low and stable - Support foreign exchange earnings, and help
maintain foreign exchange rate stability - Promote employment in rural areas, reducing
dependency on the social safety net, slowing
urban migration - Promote increased energy efficiency and the
generation of power from local renewable energy
sources - Support environmental objectives a) living
conditions clean air, pollution, water quality
and availability b) conservation - protection of
the water table, reduced salinity, soil fertility
and erosion c) heritage.
40JCS Some critical success factors
- Divestment of remaining three (3) GOJ sugar
estates _ Frome, Monymusk Bernard Lodge as soon
as possible (SCJH Aubyn Hill) - Review decision on an institutional/regulatory
structure, product marketing arrangements and a
pricing policy for sugar cane as a raw material
for a multi-product industry (Wint Commission)
41JCS Critical success factors
- Rapid thrust into value-added products to improve
the industrys revenue streams and reduce risks
(SMCJ/JCPS ??) - Massive but sustainable improvements in cane
production, productivity factory processing
efficiencies (CANE EXPANSION FUND/AIJCFA/SMCJ/UNI
ONS) - Production of 3.5M tonnes of cane as soon as
possible.
42THE END A thought !
- A journey of a thousand miles begins with just
one step. - GOD IS GREAT