USDA announces 2015 Sugar Loan Rates and Fiscal Year 2016 Sugar Program Provisions

Published online: Sep 29, 2015 News
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The USDA Commodity Credit Corporation today announced the marketing assistance loan rates for sugar for the 2015 crop year.

The CCC also announced the provisions of the fiscal year 2016 domestic sugar program.

USDA offers marketing assistance loans to processors of sugar beets and domestically grown sugarcane to provide interim financing to producers so that commodities can be stored after harvest when market prices are typically low to be sold later when price conditions are more favorable. The national average loan rate is 18.75 cents per pound for raw cane sugar and 24.09 cents per pound for refined beet sugar, the same as last year, and are adjusted regionally to reflect marketing cost differentials.

The loans are available beginning Oct. 1, 2015, and mature at the end of the nine-month period beginning the first day of the first month after the month in which the loan is made, or the end of the fiscal year in which the loan is made, whichever is earlier. Producers have the option of delivering the pledged sugar collateral to the CCC as full payment for the loan at maturity. 

Loan Rates for Refined Beet Sugar

The refined beet sugar processing regions and applicable 2015-crop (fiscal year 2016) loan rates in cents per pound of refined beet sugar are:
Michigan and Ohio – 25.23 Minnesota and the eastern half of North Dakota – 23.67 Northeastern quarter of Colorado, Nebraska and the southeastern quarter of Wyoming – 24.25 Montana, northwestern quarter of Wyoming and the western half of North Dakota – 23.85 Idaho, Oregon and Washington – 24.24 California – 24.85

Loan Rates for Raw Cane Sugar

The 2015-crop (fiscal year 2016) raw cane sugar loan rates in cents per pound of cane sugar, raw value are: Florida – 18.01 Hawaii – 17.96 (18.75 cents per pound if stored on the mainland) Louisiana – 19.69 Texas – 18.56

Sugarbeet and sugarcane processors who receive CCC loans in fiscal year 2016 are required to make minimum grower payments for all sugar beets and sugarcane received from growers. Processors failing to meet the required minimum grower payment will be ineligible for loans. Sugar beet grower minimum payments are the amount specified in the grower/processor contract.

Sugarcane processors must, at minimum, pay growers for their share of production from molasses and sugar per ton of cane as specified here.

State minimum payments are:
Florida – $28.51 per net ton Hawaii – $27.89 per net ton Louisiana – $28.79 per gross ton Texas – $26.29 per gross ton

CCC has not modified the fiscal year 2016 raw sugar loan schedule of premiums and discounts because the raw cane sugar loan rate has not changed. These schedules can be found in the Farm Service Agency (FSA) handbook 10-SU.

Initial Fiscal Year 2016 Sugar Marketing Allocations

The CCC is announcing the initial fiscal year 2016 overall sugar marketing allotment, which is established at 10,093,750 short tons, raw value. The overall sugar marketing allotment is equal to 85 percent of the estimated human consumption for the crop year of 11,875,000 short tons, raw value as forecast in the September 2015 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report. Statute requires that a fixed portion of the overall sugar marketing allotment be assigned to the beet sector and the cane sector. CCC distributed the fiscal year 2016 beet sugar allotment of 5,485,953 short tons, raw value (54.35 percent of the overall sugar marketing allotment) among the sugar beet processors and the cane sugar allotment of 4,607,797 short tons, raw value (45.65 percent of the overall sugar marketing allotment) among the sugarcane states and processors.

The 2002 farm bill amendments require that 325,000 short tons, raw value of the cane sector allotment be assigned to “offshore” states, meaning Puerto Rico and Hawaii. Because both Puerto Rican cane processors permanently terminated operations, CCC reassigned the Puerto Rico allocation of 6,356 short tons, raw value to Hawaii. Because the Hawaiian processor, Gay and Robinson, permanently terminated operations and Hawaii is not expected to use its entire cane sugar allotment, CCC reassigned 79,501 short tons, raw value of the Hawaii allotment to the mainland sugarcane-producing states.

CCC determined that farm-level proportionate shares are not necessary in Louisiana in fiscal year 2016, the only state eligible for proportionate shares, because the cane sugar sector is not expected to fill its allotment.

USDA will closely monitor stocks, consumption, imports and all sugar market and program variables on an ongoing basis. USDA will continue to administer the sugar program as transparently as possible using the latest available data, and make adjustments as necessary to ensure adequate supplies of both raw and refined sugar in the domestic market.

For more information, visit www.fsa.usda.gov/pricesupport.