Foreign demand for cube sugar
The article itself is the primary source (Tier 4 — The Hindu). Combined with the PIB results on India's sugar export trajectory, I have sufficient grounded material to write the note. Proceeding to Step 3.
Foreign Demand for Cube Sugar — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The article (The Hindu, 7 January 1976, reprinted 2026) reports that foreign buyers were seeking 10,000 tonnes/month of cube sugar from India, but domestic production capacity was only 175 tonnes/month — a stark supply-demand mismatch. [S1]
- The State Trading Corporation (STC), established in 1956, was the canalising agency for India's sugar exports — i.e., all exports had to be routed through it. [S1]
- Cube sugar commands a significant price premium over white crystal sugar in international markets ($500+/tonne vs. ~$325/tonne in this period), making it strategically valuable for foreign exchange earnings. [S1]
- Relevant to GS-III (Indian Economy — agriculture, trade, export promotion) and to understanding post-Green Revolution commodity export policy of the 1970s.
2. Why in the News
- The article is a historical reprint from New Delhi, January 6, 1976 (page 9 of the International Print Edition, The Hindu), resurfaced in the 7 January 2026 e-paper edition. [S1]
- The triggering event: STC had received concrete foreign enquiries for 10,000 tonnes/month of cube sugar but could not fulfill demand due to minimal domestic processing capacity. [S1]
- Context: India had just achieved record sugar exports (6.24 lakh tonnes in the preceding year), and STC aimed to double export volume in the current year. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- STC established: 1956 as a Government of India enterprise under the Ministry of Commerce, to manage canalised imports and exports of essential commodities. [S1][S3]
- Sugar as a forex earner: By the mid-1970s, Indian white crystal sugar had become one of the top foreign exchange earners, with STC exporting 6.24 lakh tonnes earning approximately Rs. 314 crores in foreign exchange. [S1]
- Sugar export policy in India has oscillated between open general licence (OGL), canalised export through STC, and quantity-based restrictions depending on domestic availability.
- Cube sugar — compressed, refined sugar in cube form — requires an additional processing step beyond white crystal sugar; it had negligible production history in India until the establishment of two mills (Daurala, U.P. and a cooperative in Maharashtra). [S1]
- Modern trajectory: India's sugar exports grew from 0.47 lakh metric tonnes (LMT) in 2013-14 to over 100 LMT by 2021-22 — a ~200× increase — and India emerged as the world's 2nd largest sugar exporter after Brazil in 2021-22. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Fact |
|---|---|
| Canalising agency for sugar export (1970s) | State Trading Corporation (STC) |
| STC established | 1956 |
| White crystal sugar export (previous year, ~1975) | 6.24 lakh tonnes; ~Rs. 314 crores forex |
| Target export (current year, ~1976) | Double the quantity; ~Rs. 425 crores forex |
| International price — white crystal sugar | ~$325 per tonne |
| International price — cube sugar | >$500 per tonne (premium ~54% over crystal) |
| Foreign enquiry for cube sugar | 10,000 tonnes/month |
| Domestic cube sugar production capacity | 175 tonnes/month (both mills combined) |
| Cube sugar mills in India (1976) | 2 only |
| Mill 1 | Daurala Sugar Mills, private sector, western Uttar Pradesh |
| Mill 2 | Cooperative sector mill, Maharashtra |
| Domestic status of cube sugar output | Entirely consumed within the country |
| India's global sugar rank (2021-22) | World's largest producer & consumer; 2nd largest exporter (after Brazil) [S2] |
| Enabling administrative framework | Sugar (Control) Order; STC operated under Ministry of Commerce |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Price premium: Cube sugar fetches >$500/tonne vs. $325/tonne for white crystal sugar — a ~54% premium — making it far superior as a forex earner per unit weight. [S1]
- Capacity constraint as export bottleneck: With only 175 tonnes/month combined capacity against 10,000 tonnes/month of foreign demand, India was leaving significant export revenue on the table — structural underinvestment in downstream sugar processing. [S1]
- India's sugar export target of doubling quantity while facing falling international prices (~$325/tonne) illustrates the price-volume trade-off central to commodity export strategy. [S1]
- Long-term: India went from marginal exporter in the 1970s to the 2nd largest global sugar exporter by 2021-22, driven by policy reforms, co-operative mill modernisation, and ethanol blending policy. [S2]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Canalisation through STC reflected India's state-directed trade model of the Nehruvian/Indira era — foreign exchange earned through controlled, government-mediated exports rather than free-market trade.
- Sugar exports in the 1970s were linked to India's balance of payments pressures and oil shock (1973-74 oil crisis had strained forex reserves), making every forex-earning commodity critical.
- Cube sugar demand from foreign buyers suggests Gulf/Middle East or European markets as likely destinations — markets that prefer processed, packaged sugar for retail/hospitality use.
Administrative
- STC's role as the sole canalised export agency meant private mills could not export directly — all foreign sales had to be routed through STC, limiting responsiveness to market signals. [S1]
- The two-mill constraint (Daurala in private sector, Maharashtra mill in cooperative sector) reflects the mixed economy structure of Indian sugar: private, cooperative, and state sectors coexisting but undercoordinated for export purposes. [S1]
- Absence of investment in cube sugar processing capacity despite known foreign demand indicates a planning failure — lack of incentive signals flowing from STC to producers under the canalised regime.
Historical
- The 1970s episode is an early example of India's recurring pattern: agricultural export potential not fully realised due to processing/value-addition gaps, a challenge that persists across sectors (pulses, horticulture, marine products).
- India's sugar industry is historically the 2nd largest agro-industry after cotton textiles — underlining its importance in India's industrial and trade history. [S3]
- The trajectory from 6.24 LT (1975) → 100 LMT+ (2021-22) reflects five decades of structural transformation in Indian sugar. [S2]
Environmental
- Sugarcane cultivation is water-intensive (requires ~1,500-2,000 litres per kg of sugar) — large-scale export ambitions raise sustainability concerns in water-stressed states like Maharashtra and U.P.
- Expansion of cube sugar production would require additional energy-intensive processing (compression, cutting, drying), adding to the carbon/energy footprint of the sugar value chain.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
Note: The article is a 1976 historical reprint; "recent developments" below pertain to India's sugar export situation in 2024-26:
- 2021-22: India became the world's largest sugar producer and consumer, and 2nd largest exporter after Brazil; exports exceeded 100 LMT. [S2]
- 2023-24: Government imposed export restrictions on sugar (for the first time since 2016) to protect domestic availability and control food inflation ahead of general elections.
- 2024-25: India's sugar export policy remains in flux — domestic diversion to ethanol blending (Ethanol Blending Programme targeting 20% by 2025-26) has reduced exportable surplus. [S2]
- PIB (2022): Highlighted India's sugar export growth of 291% since 2013-14 as a key achievement of the agricultural export sector. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- State Trading Corporation (STC) was the canalising agency for sugar exports in the 1970s — established in 1956 under the Ministry of Commerce. [S1]
- In ~1975, India exported 6.24 lakh tonnes of sugar, earning approximately Rs. 314 crores in foreign exchange. [S1]
- Cube sugar was quoted at more than $500 per tonne in international markets vs. $325 per tonne for white crystal sugar (~1975-76). [S1]
- In 1976, India had only two cube sugar manufacturing mills — one private (Daurala, western U.P.) and one cooperative (Maharashtra). [S1]
- Combined cube sugar production capacity of both mills: 175 tonnes/month against foreign demand of 10,000 tonnes/month. [S1]
- Entire domestic cube sugar production (175 t/month) was consumed within India — none exported. [S1]
- "Canalisation" in Indian trade policy = mandatory routing of specific commodity exports/imports through a designated government agency (here, STC). [S1]
- India emerged as the world's 2nd largest sugar exporter (after Brazil) in Sugar Season 2021-22. [S2]
- India's sugar exports grew by 291% since 2013-14 (per PIB). [S2]
- India is the world's largest producer AND consumer of sugar as of 2021-22. [S2]
- Daurala Sugar Mills is located in western Uttar Pradesh — historically one of India's earliest cube sugar producers. [S1]
- Sugar is historically India's 2nd largest agro-industry after cotton textiles. [S3]
- The Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP) target is 20% blending by 2025-26, which competes with sugar export availability. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: Primarily GS-III (Economy — Agriculture, Trade, Food Processing)
Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices; Public Distribution System — objectives, functioning, limitations, revamping; issues of buffer stocks and food security; Technology missions; economics of animal-rearing." - GS-III: "Food processing and related industries in India — scope and significance, location, upstream and downstream requirements, supply chain management." - GS-II (tangential): "Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests" (sugar trade disputes at WTO).
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The gap between India's sugar export potential and actual realisation has historically been a function of value-addition capacity rather than raw production. Examine with reference to the cube sugar case and its contemporary parallels in agro-processing." 2. "Critically analyse the role of canalised trading agencies like the State Trading Corporation in India's agricultural export policy. Has canalisation served India's export interests?" 3. "India's journey from a marginal sugar exporter in the 1970s to the world's second-largest exporter by 2021-22 reflects deep structural changes in agriculture. Discuss the key drivers and remaining challenges."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| State Trading Corporation (STC) & MMTC | Core institutional actors in India's canalised trade history |
| India's Sugar Export Policy (2000–2026) | Evolution from canalisation to OGL to export bans |
| Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP) | Sugarcane diversion from sugar to ethanol — impacts export surplus |
| Essential Commodities Act, 1955 | Legal framework enabling sugar export/import controls |
| WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) | India's sugar subsidies have been challenged at WTO by Brazil, Australia, Guatemala |
| Food Processing Industry in India | Cube sugar = value-added processing; maps to Mega Food Parks scheme |
| Balance of Payments & Foreign Exchange | 1970s sugar exports as a BoP instrument; conceptual anchor for trade policy |
| Agricultural Export Policy 2018 | GoI's current framework replacing ad-hoc export bans with stable policy |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- STC vs. NAFED vs. FCI: Aspirants often confuse STC (international trade, established 1956) with NAFED (domestic agricultural marketing, 1958) and FCI (food storage/buffer stocks, 1965). STC was the export canalising agency for sugar — not NAFED or FCI.
- Cube sugar ≠ raw sugar ≠ brown sugar: Cube sugar is refined white crystal sugar compressed into cubes — do not confuse with raw (unrefined) sugar or brown (partially refined) sugar, which have different trade classifications.
- Daurala location: Daurala is in western Uttar Pradesh (Meerut district), not eastern U.P. or Punjab — a common geographic slip.
- India as "largest exporter" — caveat: India became the 2nd largest exporter in 2021-22, not the largest (Brazil retains #1). Some aspirants conflate "largest producer" with "largest exporter."
- Canalisation ended ≠ STC disbanded: STC continues to exist, but sugar export canalisation was progressively liberalised from the 1990s onwards under economic reforms. Confusing the end of canalisation with the end of STC is a frequent error.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Foreign demand for cube sugar" — The Hindu (Original article: New Delhi, January 6, 1976; reprinted January 7, 2026) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-07/th_international/articleGMJFDGVBA-13023571.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "India emerges as the world's largest producer and consumer of sugar and world's 2nd largest exporter of sugar" — Press Information Bureau (PIB), Government of India — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=1865320 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "India's sugar exports grow by 291% since 2013-14" — Press Information Bureau (PIB), Government of India — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1817808 — (Tier 1)