Dubai's Al Khaleej Sugar says operating at 70 pct capacity


(MENAFN- The Peninsula)

DUBAI: Dubai's Al Khaleej Sugar Refinery the world's biggest port-based refinery said on Saturday it was operating at only 70 percent of its capacity due to slow physical demand for white sugar despite high white premiums.

"There is no real physical off-take the physical off-take is very slow" Jamal al-Ghurair managing director of the refinery told Reuters in an interview ahead of the Dubai Sugar Conference.

The whites-over-raws premium is a measure of refining profitability with levels over $100 per tonne seen as very attractive margins.

The whites-over-raws premium traded above $110 per tonne in the global market on Monday for the first time since August driven by strong import demand by China the world's top sugar buyer. However Ghurair said high premiums were a reflection of a "paper squeeze" not physical demand.

"There's no real buyer its just a paper squeeze ... it is a paper manipulation" he said. He expects white premiums have reached their peak and will probably go down in the summer.

"We will probably see them at $80 to $100 a tonne in 2016" he said.

The Al Khaleej refinery has a capacity of 7000 tonnes a day but is being underutilized as export prospects are weak.

"We are entering 2016 with more uncertainty than certainty" he said.

A number of refineries came onstream in the Middle East in recent years in Yemen Bahrian and Iraq with more capacity in Oman and Saudi Arabia due to come onstream in the next few years.

Iraq once a top export destination for the refinery is now producing most of its white sugar locally after the Babylon-based Etihad sugar refinery came onstream in 2015.

Ghurair said Al Khaleej was only exporting 20 percent of what it used to export in the past to Iraq.

"We are exporting very little to Iraq" he said.

Al Khaleej exported 500000 tonnes of white sugar to Iraq in 2014.

Iraq said in December it would stop imports of refined sugar for a government food distribution program as the country's own production rises.

Ghurair also said Al Khaleej was well-stocked with Brazilian raw sugar and had enough to last until the third quarter of 2016 but declined to give an exact figure.

"When the market picks up I will be ready but we need some signs or orders to do more" he said.

No new investments are being planned whether regionally or abroad and no maintenance plans were scheduled for 2016.

"The best thing to be in sugar now is passive not to do any active investments" he said.

Ghurair also ruled out plans for any takeovers or consolidation with regional refiners.

"There is no advantage to it" he said adding that around 40 percent of refining capacity in the region was not being used.

REUTERS


The Peninsula

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Newsletter