By Marc Frank
HAVANA, March 4 (Reuters) - For the third consecutive year
Cuba's reorganized sugar industry is failing to perform up to
expectations, increasing pressure on the government to open up
the once proud sector to foreign investment.
Already one mill, the first since the industry was
nationalized soon after the 1959 revolution, is under foreign
management, with at least seven others on the auction block.
AZCUBA, the state-run holding company that replaced the
Sugar Ministry three years ago, announced plans to produce 1.8
million tonnes of raw sugar this season, 18 percent more than
last season's 1.6 million tonnes.
But the harvest is 20 percent behind schedule, sugar
reporter Juan Varela Perez wrote recently in Granma, the
Communist Party daily.
"Continuous and heavy rainfall in almost all provinces of
the country has affected the harvest since January," state-run
Radio Rebelde said late last week, reporting on a meeting of
AZCUBA executives at the end of February.
"To this has been added the habitual problems of inputs
arriving late, disorganization and the poor quality and slowness
of repairs," the report said.
Sugar was once Cuba's leading export, both before the
revolution and afterward, when the former Soviet Union bought
Cuban sugar at guaranteed prices. Today it is Cuba's seventh
largest earner of foreign currency, behind services,
remittances, tourism, nickel, pharmaceuticals, and cigars.
"These days it is a true odyssey to go through a harvest.
The mills need more profound repairs, but that costs millions
upon millions of dollars," Manuel Osorio, a mill worker in
eastern Granma province, said in a telephone interview on
Tuesday.
"So they do some superficial repairs and start grinding and
immediately the problems begin and this year to top it off it is
hot and raining almost every day. The cane needs cool and dry
weather to mature. If not, it is like milling weeds."
The sugar harvest begins in December with the "winter"
season and runs into May, with January through March the key
months as dry and cool weather increases yields, but not this
year.
"I can't remember a wetter winter and it is almost
impossible to harvest," sugarcane cutter Arnaldo Hernandez said
in a telephone interview from eastern Holguin province.
Cuban sugar plantations lack adequate drainage, making
harvesting by machine difficult when it rains, and humid weather
retards the production of sugar in cane.
"Going into the plantations is a heroic task, and when the
cane reaches the mills it yields little sugar," Hernandez said.
"Look, even the Guaraperas (sugarcane juice) they sell in the
city is like water. I know because I tried some myself
yesterday."
Rainfall was twice the average for the month in key eastern
and central provinces through most of February, according to
official media.
"So far this year 115.2 millimeters (4.5 inches) of rain has
fallen in (the eastern province of) Las Tunas, twice the
historic average," the National Information Agency reported in
late February. The agency said the harvest in Las Tunas was
35,000 tonnes of raw sugar behind schedule to date toward a plan
of 194,000 tonnes through May.
A similar situation was reported in central Villa Clara,
where the goal is 218,000 tonnes, and in central Camaguey, which
reported production to date was 13 percent, or 11,000 tonnes,
below plan.
INVESTMENT OPENING
Cuba produced just 1.2 million tonnes of raw sugar three
seasons ago when AZCUBA was formed, compared with 8 million
tonnes in the early 1990s, before the demise of the Soviet Union
led to the industry's near collapse.
Industry plans call for an annual average increase in output
of 15 percent through 2016, though over the last three harvests
the increase has been 12 percent, according to AZCUBA.
The poor performance so far this year may accelerate
AZCUBA's plans to open the sector to private investment.
President Raul Castro, who assumed power from his ailing
brother Fidel Castro in 2008, is trying to revive the country's
economy through reforms passed by the Communist Party in 2011.
The plans include more foreign investment.
This year, the Cuban Chamber of Commerce listed seven more
sugar mills as candidates for foreign investment, all of which
were built after the revolution and are therefore not subject to
claims by previous owners.
The remaining 48 mills in the country were all built more
than 60 years ago.
This month the Cuban National Assembly is expected to pass a
new foreign investment law that makes the island, and
agriculture, more investor friendly.
Odebrecht SA, a Brazilian corporation, began
administering a mill in central Cienfuegos province this year,
the first foreign company allowed into the industry since 1959.
Odebrecht subsidiary, Compañía de Obras en Infraestructura,
plans to upgrade the mill as well as the supporting farm and
transport sectors, and has expressed an interest in other mills,
as have a number of other foreign companies.
Its 13-year contract calls for an investment of around $140
million to increase output to more than 120,000 tonnes of raw
sugar from 40,000 tonnes.
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