China's sugar price has climbing steadily of late, mounting to a
new high of 5,000 yuan (about US$620) per ton, Friday's China
Securities Journal reported.
The paper quoted the Ministry of Commerce as saying that the
average retail price of sugar stood at 5.7 yuan in February, up
3.49 percent and 12.9 percent respectively over last month and the
same period of last year.
Foods containing sugar, like beverages and cakes, also witnessed
a price rise, according to the survey conducted by the ministry in
supermarkets.
Due to the price hike and straining supply of sugar, cities like
Qingdao in eastern Shandong Province and Guangzhou in southern
Guangdong Province, reported a shortage of sugar in late
February.
Insiders said the price rise is owed mainly to a drop in sugar
production and a rising international price.
Friday's Shanghai Securities News said a meeting held by
concerned departments has approved that the government will launch
one million tons of sugar, so as to fetch up the market shortage,
noting that market supply will determine the amount.
In 1991, China started up its national reserve of sugar, keeping
the amount beyond one million tons in most years. The national
sugar reserve had about 1.5 million and one million tons
respectively in 2004 and 2005.
China is now the world's fourth largest sugar producer after
Brazil, India, and European Union, and the world's fifth largest
consumer after India, the EU, Brazil and the United States.
(Xinhua News Agency March 4, 2006)