Europe: Should we produce more beets in a buoyant sugar market?

Published 2023년 12월 8일

Tridge summary

Geopolitics researcher Sébastien Abis believes that Europe and France should not produce less beets, as the crop is useful for food, energy, and chemical industries while also storing carbon. Growers are mainly interested in beet production due to prices and increased production costs, but prices are expected to be satisfactory in the current market context. There is uncertainty in the market, with concerns about India's withdrawal from the global sugar market and the potential impact of Ukrainian production on European prices.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

“I don’t see the point for Europe and for France to produce less beets,” believes Sébastien Abis in any case. Invited to the CGB congress on December 7 in Reims, the geopolitics researcher, co-author of the book “Geopolitics of Sugar”, highlighted the advantages of this useful crop for food, energy, chemical industries, while storing carbon. If growers do not discover the advantages of beet, it is mainly the prices that interest them, especially since production costs have increased considerably in recent years, alongside the disappearance of plant protection solutions, notably neonicotinoids. . However, these prices should prove rather satisfactory this year, in a particularly buoyant market context. At the global level, the market was until now "captured by India", the second largest producer in the world, which exported its surpluses whenever prices were more attractive than on its domestic market, explains Olivier Crassard, market analyst for the Sucres group. and Foodstuffs. ...
Source: TerreNet

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