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SAO PAULO, Brazil, July 26 /PRNewswire/ --
- Amid reports that G-7 members are close to an agreement in the current
phase of Doha Round talks in Geneva, the president of the Brazilian Sugarcane
Industry Association is en route to Switzerland to closely monitor the final
stages of the negotiation.
Access to major markets around the globe for Brazilian sugarcane ethanol
with lower tariffs, and full integration of ethanol in global trade, as is
the case with any other product: these are the key expectations of the
Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA) as the current phase of Doha
Round negotiations in Geneva, Switzerland, draws to a close.
"What we expect now is full integration for ethanol into global trade.
Ethanol should not be treated any differently because currently it is not
considered a sensitive product in Europe or the United States," according to
UNICA president and CEO, Marcos Sawaya Jank. He adds that World Trade
Organization rules are developed for all products, including ethanol, so the
idea that a specific product is somehow "outside the list" doesn't exist.
According to Jank, ethanol producers in Brazil expect to see significant
cuts in ethanol tariffs. "We're not talking about quotas as some have been
suggesting, but tariff cuts duly calculated using the formula already agreed
to by negotiators. The formula should simply be applied and the new, reduced
tariff, adopted," he said.
As is the case with all agricultural products, European and American
tariffs imposed on imported ethanol will have to be reduced once the formula
is applied. According to the WTO, tariffs between 20% and 50% (the range
covering EU tariffs on ethanol) must be reduced 57% while tariffs between 50%
and 75% (the range covering ethanol tariffs charged in the United States)
should be cut by 64%. Five years after these cuts are implemented, the EU
tariff should come down from 19.2 euros per hectolitre to 8.25 euros per
hectolitre, while the American tariff should end up at 0.9% + 19.5 cents per
gallon, down from 2.5% + 54 cents per gallon.
Jank considers tariff reductions the ideal option, but if negotiators in
Geneva choose to classify ethanol as a sensitive product and conclude there
is room to create new quotas, compensation will be necessary. "If the
ministers decide to accept new sensitive products, we want compensation to be
significant, far higher than the 1.75 billion litres per year that could be
exported to Europe under a proposal mentioned by EU trade chief Peter
Mandelson."
Specifically in the case of the United States, Jank repeated that full
integration of ethanol as a product is expected, along with cuts to both
tariffs that currently exist -- an "ad valorem" tax and a secondary tax.
According to Jank, to contain rising global commodity prices, it is
essential to streamline global trade in ethanol. Ideally, this would spare
major ethanol consuming countries with restricted production capacity, where
ethanol production may compete with food production, from facing the types of
problems that have surfaced in recent months. A reduction in both European
and U.S. tariffs on imported ethanol will allow for greater imports by
industrialized countries of ethanol produced from more efficient feedstocks,
which would benefit developing nations that produce ethanol from such
feedstocks while reducing dependence on fossil fuels and forcing down
gasoline prices.
Marcos Jank will be in Geneva as of the morning of Saturday, July 26, to
follow the final stages of the current set of Doha Round negotiations.
ABOUT UNICA:
The Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA) represents the top
producers of sugar and ethanol in the country's South-Central region,
especially the state of Sao Paulo, which accounts for about 50% of the
country's sugarcane harvest and 60% of total ethanol production. UNICA
develops position papers, statistics and specific research in support of
Brazil's sugar, ethanol and bioelectricity sectors. In 2007, Brazil produced
an estimated 487 million metric tons of sugarcane, which yielded 30.6 million
tons of sugar and 22 billion liters of ethanol.
Adhemar Altieri
Corporate Communications
Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA)
Sao Paulo, Brazil
+5511-3093-4949
+5511-3812-1416 - fax
www.unica.com.br
Web site: http://www.unica.com.br
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