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


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


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

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative

Historical

Environmental


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:


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. State Trading Corporation (STC) was the canalising agency for sugar exports in the 1970s — established in 1956 under the Ministry of Commerce. [S1]
  2. In ~1975, India exported 6.24 lakh tonnes of sugar, earning approximately Rs. 314 crores in foreign exchange. [S1]
  3. Cube sugar was quoted at more than $500 per tonne in international markets vs. $325 per tonne for white crystal sugar (~1975-76). [S1]
  4. In 1976, India had only two cube sugar manufacturing mills — one private (Daurala, western U.P.) and one cooperative (Maharashtra). [S1]
  5. Combined cube sugar production capacity of both mills: 175 tonnes/month against foreign demand of 10,000 tonnes/month. [S1]
  6. Entire domestic cube sugar production (175 t/month) was consumed within India — none exported. [S1]
  7. "Canalisation" in Indian trade policy = mandatory routing of specific commodity exports/imports through a designated government agency (here, STC). [S1]
  8. India emerged as the world's 2nd largest sugar exporter (after Brazil) in Sugar Season 2021-22. [S2]
  9. India's sugar exports grew by 291% since 2013-14 (per PIB). [S2]
  10. India is the world's largest producer AND consumer of sugar as of 2021-22. [S2]
  11. Daurala Sugar Mills is located in western Uttar Pradesh — historically one of India's earliest cube sugar producers. [S1]
  12. Sugar is historically India's 2nd largest agro-industry after cotton textiles. [S3]
  13. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Daurala location: Daurala is in western Uttar Pradesh (Meerut district), not eastern U.P. or Punjab — a common geographic slip.
  4. 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."
  5. 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