Sugar prices have dipped from a 12-year peak hit in November, but are still historically high. Brazilian mills are rushing to complete expansions or new plants to boost their sugar production capacity, analysts said.
Every mill that can do it (boost sugar capacity), is doing it, said Julio Maria Borges, a director and partner at JOB Economia e Planejamento, an advisory firm.
The difference on financial returns between sugar and ethanol is just too big.
France s Tereos (TEREOT.UL), which has seven plants in Brazil, plans to allocate 70% of its sugarcane for sugar production, and 30% to ethanol. That is a boost from the already high level of 67% last season.
Many other mills are making smaller adjustments, optimizing sugar installations. Cane allocation towards sugar production - and away from ethanol production - across Brazil last year was the largest in 12 years at 49%. Most analysts expect it to be a record in the new season
CLIMATE HIT
Despite the increase in sugar production capacity, Brazil is unlikely to produce more of the sweetener in the new season than it did in 2023/24.
We had (in 23/24) a climate that was like laboratory, just perfect, Borges said.
It rained well at the right time, and then was dry for harvest. We are not seeing this now.
Tereos expects Brazil s Centre-South (CS) sugarcane production to fall below 600 million tons in 2024/25 from 660 million tons in 2023/24.
Broker StoneX still projects a record sugar production in the new season at 43 million tons, saying the increase in cane allocation to sugar production, at the expense of ethanol, will offset a smaller sugarcane volume.