Fulfill Your 2025 Goals With The Watsons Goal Getters

Ready to make 2025 your best year yet? Join the Watsons Goal Getters campaign and start your journey to a healthier, happier life!

TXT’s Concert In 4DX Brings MOAs To The Edge Of Their Seats—Quite Literally

Experience music like never before in “Tomorrow X Together: Hyperfocus,” the immersive 4DX concert film featuring admired hits, available at Ayala Malls Cinemas from January 15-21.

‘iNDIEGENIUS’ Project Champions Cultural Films For The Second Time Around

With its second edition, the iNDIEGENIUS Project Lab at iACADEMY provides promising filmmakers with essential tools and support to explore Indigenous storytelling.

Weaving the Past into the Future: Cebu Pacific Promotes Philippine Textile Arts

Cebu Pacific takes a step towards preserving Philippine cultural heritage through its new initiative promoting local textile arts.

Producers Group Welcomes DA Move To Regulate Entry Of Sugar Premixes

The DA’s decision to instruct the SRA to manage sugar-based product imports gains support from UNIFED.

Producers Group Welcomes DA Move To Regulate Entry Of Sugar Premixes

1413
1413

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The United Sugar Producers Federation (UNIFED), the country’s largest independent sugar planters’ group, on Wednesday welcomed the move of the Department of Agriculture (DA) in instructing the Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) to regulate the entry of sugar-based products into the country.

“The volume of sugar premixes represents about four million bags of sugar amounting to roughly PHP10 billion.The continued lack of regulation for these sugar-based products is highly detrimental to the sugar industry,” UNIFED president Manuel Lamata said in a statement.

The Bacolod-based Lamata, representatives of Luzon Federation of Sugarcane Growers and Associations, Mindanao Sugar Federation, Philippine Sugar Millers Association, as well as members of the SRA Board, conferred with Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. during a consultative meeting in Manila on Tuesday.

Lamata said there is a need to investigate the “alarming volume of other sugars” entering the country in the last eight years, reaching 200,000 to 300,000 metric tons each year.

This is probably causing the stagnant demand for sugar in the past decade, he added.

Lamata thanked the DA chief for the “swift response” in directing the SRA to “look into the actual volumes of other sugars coming into the country, and if warranted, require them to acquire clearances as well.”

“We hope Administrator Azcona will make this a priority and can provide us updates before the next milling season starts,” he said.

Based on the tariff code 17.02 of the ASEAN Harmonized Tariff Nomenclature, only the entry of high fructose corn syrup is strictly regulated after the sugar industry demanded that products using such sweetener must be taxed higher after a decrease in sugar demand some eight years ago.

The entry of sugars like glucose, sucrose, maltose, dextrose, maltodextrin, and lactose are not being regulated.

“Before we knew it, we received reports that these are coming in, in staggering amounts,” Lamata said. (PNA)