An official website of the European Union How do you know?      
European Commission logo
JRC Publications Repository Menu

EU sugar policy : a sweet transition after 2015 ?

cover
This report compares the production, market and trade outcomes of two alternative policy scenarios, namely expiry of EU sugar quotas in 2015/16 and extension of the current sugar quota scheme. All other EU policy measures pertaining to the sugar sector, and to agriculture more generally, are assumed the same in both scenarios. The year of comparison is 2020. The CAPRI model was used for the simulations. The report begins with a description of beet and sugar production within the EU, and outlines the policies applied in the sugar sector within the EU’s Common Agricultural policy. This is followed by a description of the workings of the EU market for sugar. A theoretical model is used to summarise the main functional relationships in the EU sugar market and related markets, and the EU’s trade in sugar, from which a number of theory-based predictions about the impacts of quota expiry are derived. There is then a very brief overview of the CAPRI model and the way it has been used in this study. Isoglucose quotas will expire along with sugar quotas, and there is much speculation about the extent of potential competitive substitution between the two sweeteners, which has until now been neutralised by the quota arrangements. Sensitivity analysis was performed to obtain greater insight into this issue. Two additional quota-expiry scenarios were run, in which isoglucose was assumed to take a 10% and a 20% share of the sweetener market at the expense of sugar. The main findings are: • production of sugar beet and white sugar increases by around 4%,. • there is little net impact on the production of cereals, • total ethanol production hardly changes, but the importance of sugar as an ethanol feedstock declines by a few percentage points, • raw sugar imports from high-cost third countries decline very substantially, but those from the low-cost producer Brazil decrease only slightly, • EU sugar exports fall, • EU human consumption of sugar increases only marginally, despite a fall of 15-16% in beet prices for sugar for internal human consumption, • there is a very small positive welfare change, although income accruing to sugar beet producers falls by over 17%,
2014-02-03
Publications Office of the European Union
JRC76619
978-92-79-35567-7,   
1831-9424,   
EUR 26530,    OP LF-NA-26530-EN-N,   
http://ipts.jrc.ec.europa.eu/publications/pub.cfm?id=6999,    https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC76619,   
10.2791/68116,   
NameCountryCityType
Datasets
IDTitlePublic URL
Dataset collections
IDAcronymTitlePublic URL
Scripts / source codes
DescriptionPublic URL
Additional supporting files
File nameDescriptionFile type 
Show metadata record  Copy citation url to clipboard  Download BibTeX
Items published in the JRC Publications Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Additional information: https://ec.europa.eu/info/legal-notice_en#copyright-notice