Zürcher Nachrichten - The struggle to save Cuban sugar from bitter end

EUR -
AED 3.763095
AFN 72.847362
ALL 97.691002
AMD 406.577771
ANG 1.846413
AOA 934.378338
ARS 1062.199437
AUD 1.666958
AWG 1.846728
AZN 1.745781
BAM 1.944917
BBD 2.068587
BDT 124.969518
BGN 1.955852
BHD 0.386216
BIF 3030.649176
BMD 1.024537
BND 1.401169
BOB 7.078943
BRL 6.261566
BSD 1.024547
BTN 88.17053
BWP 14.419442
BYN 3.352801
BYR 20080.929875
BZD 2.057946
CAD 1.47808
CDF 2940.422245
CHF 0.939112
CLF 0.037481
CLP 1034.209276
CNY 7.512628
CNH 7.542955
COP 4447.772287
CRC 517.146705
CUC 1.024537
CUP 27.150237
CVE 109.653046
CZK 25.067152
DJF 182.081161
DKK 7.460921
DOP 62.892995
DZD 139.354705
EGP 51.797328
ERN 15.368059
ETB 128.559389
FJD 2.396089
FKP 0.811415
GBP 0.839073
GEL 2.894359
GGP 0.811415
GHS 15.111623
GIP 0.811415
GMD 73.258358
GNF 8858.346975
GTQ 7.905687
GYD 214.347364
HKD 7.978738
HNL 26.055243
HRK 7.348909
HTG 133.840246
HUF 413.22767
IDR 16671.269946
ILS 3.775025
IMP 0.811415
INR 88.293441
IQD 1342.095151
IRR 43120.214937
ISK 144.706035
JEP 0.811415
JMD 160.641138
JOD 0.726811
JPY 161.56444
KES 132.606249
KGS 89.135099
KHR 4141.151692
KMF 489.78042
KPW 922.082942
KRW 1509.789204
KWD 0.316074
KYD 0.853789
KZT 540.69677
LAK 22354.660837
LBP 91744.90846
LKR 301.775842
LRD 191.582964
LSL 19.469867
LTL 3.025193
LVL 0.619733
LYD 5.063863
MAD 10.296338
MDL 19.148351
MGA 4851.233898
MKD 61.537537
MMK 3327.656986
MNT 3481.377403
MOP 8.21577
MRU 40.885228
MUR 47.979467
MVR 15.781704
MWK 1776.498383
MXN 21.229133
MYR 4.606836
MZN 65.47175
NAD 19.471568
NGN 1589.539175
NIO 37.699056
NOK 11.752984
NPR 141.071964
NZD 1.843737
OMR 0.394437
PAB 1.024547
PEN 3.85493
PGK 4.107079
PHP 60.129105
PKR 285.308046
PLN 4.265169
PYG 8044.614802
QAR 3.734802
RON 4.975976
RSD 117.086684
RUB 104.24571
RWF 1425.136977
SAR 3.84603
SBD 8.6465
SCR 14.617389
SDG 615.747228
SEK 11.487481
SGD 1.404943
SHP 0.811415
SLE 23.308602
SLL 21484.036726
SOS 585.469741
SRD 35.966419
STD 21205.852305
SVC 8.963756
SYP 2574.180797
SZL 19.46759
THB 35.557628
TJS 11.17743
TMT 3.58588
TND 3.2884
TOP 2.399573
TRY 36.292904
TTD 6.954629
TWD 33.88811
TZS 2564.892132
UAH 43.32342
UGX 3788.099614
USD 1.024537
UYU 44.730368
UZS 13273.920592
VES 55.13187
VND 25992.509742
VUV 121.635113
WST 2.830579
XAF 652.357695
XAG 0.033707
XAU 0.00038
XCD 2.768864
XDR 0.788947
XOF 652.316537
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.366279
ZAR 19.574885
ZMK 9222.068266
ZMW 28.301848
ZWL 329.900573
  • SCS

    -0.3300

    10.97

    -3.01%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    22.92

    -0.79%

  • AZN

    0.4300

    67.01

    +0.64%

  • NGG

    -1.8500

    56.13

    -3.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • BTI

    -0.8400

    35.9

    -2.34%

  • BCC

    -1.5200

    115.88

    -1.31%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • RIO

    0.2100

    58.84

    +0.36%

  • GSK

    -0.6600

    33.09

    -1.99%

  • BP

    0.1700

    31.29

    +0.54%

  • BCE

    -0.6700

    22.96

    -2.92%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.08

    -1.16%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    7.1

    -1.41%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    46.37

    -0.86%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    8.05

    -1.99%

The struggle to save Cuban sugar from bitter end
The struggle to save Cuban sugar from bitter end

The struggle to save Cuban sugar from bitter end

A whistle reverberates through a sugar factory in central Cuba to signal the resumption of milling at midday after an hours-long halt when the raw cane ran out.

Text size:

It is cane harvest time in Cuba -- once the world's top sugar exporter but now reliant on imports.

A critical shortage of harvesters and trucks to deliver the cane to factories has hamstrung production even as the government scrambles to revive the once-vibrant industry.

Cuba's 2020-21 harvest yielded 800,000 tons of the sweet stuff, according to official figures.

This was just 10 percent of peak production some three decades ago and the worst outcome in 130 years for an industry that was once Cuba's economic motor and a huge source of national pride.

"This is a war without end," Lazaro Manuel Torres, boss of the Antonio Sanchez mill in Cuba's central Cienfuegos province, told AFP.

"From the moment you wake up, you run into a mountain" of problems, said Torres, watching with obvious relief as a column of white smoke billowed from the chimney after the restart.

- Just 56 mills left -

Until 1989, Cuba was the world's biggest sugar exporter.

The United States was its major client until 1960 -- two years before Washington imposed crippling sanctions on the communist island nation.

The Soviet Union, a political ally, then became an important buyer and was given preferential rates.

Sugar was at the heart of Cuba's plans for a prosperous future, with Fidel Castro leading a drive in the 1970s -- complete with propaganda photos of him wielding a machete in the sugar plantations -- to push the country's output to 10 million tons per year.

The goal was never achieved.

The fall of the communist bloc in 1991 marked the beginning of the end for Cuba's sugar industry -- exacerbated by sanctions, a steep drop in prices and a lack of investment that saw 100 mills disappear.

Just 56 are left today.

Cuba now needs to import sugar to meet local demand and its export commitments.

"We have been in decline since 2017," Noel Casanas, vice director of state-owned sugar producer AZCUBA, told AFP.

"If the situation continues, it is true that (the industry) will disappear."

Sugar is still an important income generator for 50 of Cuba's 169 municipalities, or some 1.2 million of the country's 11.2 million inhabitants, he said.

- 'Practically a corpse' -

In December, the government approved dozens of measures in a bid to resuscitate sugar.

It doubled the price paid to cane producers, authorized the free hiring and firing of labor, and gave factories more decision-making autonomy in a country where just about everything is state-run.

"I don't think these measures can revive an industry that is already practically a corpse," said economist Emilio Morales of the Miami-based Havana Consulting Group.

Casanas conceded production faces "limitations of all kinds" -- critically a lack of foreign investment due to the strengthening of US sanctions since the presidency of Donald Trump.

Since the cane harvest opened in December, Antonio Sanchez has not managed to exceed 65 percent of milling capacity, set at 20,000 tons for this year's harvest.

The problem has not been a lack of fuel or raw product, this time, but a shortage of harvesters and delivery trucks.

There are not enough spare parts, even tires, for vehicles in Cuba and producers such as Torres cannot afford to buy the limited components that are available.

"If you don't have harvesters, if you do not have trucks, you cannot mill," he lamented.

Sugar producers in Cuba are also hard hit by a lack of fertilizers and pesticides.

For now, the government's measures have managed to slow an exodus of sugar workers, industry bosses told AFP.

"We cannot complain, we are doing quite well -- up to 700 pesos (about $29) a day," said farmer Livan Hernandez.

The average monthly Cuban salary is about $162.

Casanas said what is needed is foreign investment and expanding the industry into highly lucrative sugar derivatives such as bioethanol.

Sugar "is no longer the locomotive (of the Cuban economy) nor will it be," he said.

But "it continues to be a strategic sector... that must be developed."

F.Carpenteri--NZN