The issue came up for discussion during
the meeting of the WTO’s agriculture committee on May 23-24 in Geneva.These
countries are also major sugar exporters like India and they allege that
support measures by India distort global sugar trade.
Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Paraguay,
New Zealand, the EU, and Guatemala have “urged
India to submit timely notifications on the subsidies”, the Geneva-based official said.
India
has stated that the Indian central and state governments neither paid for nor
procured sugarcane from farmers, as all purchases were made by private sugar
mills, hence, this information was not included in its notifications of
domestic support.
The discussion assumes significance as
in 2022, India has appealed against a ruling of the World Trade Organization’s
(WTO) trade dispute settlement panel which ruled that the country’s domestic
support measures for sugar and sugarcane are inconsistent with global trade
norms.
The appeal was filed by India in the
WTO’s Appellate Body, which is the final authority on such trade disputes and
is not functioning.
Brazil, Australia, and Guatemala had
filed the cases against India on these support measures.
In its appeal, India has stated that the
WTO’s dispute panel ruling has made certain “erroneous” findings about domestic
schemes to support sugarcane producers and exports and the findings of the
panel are completely “unacceptable” to it.The
US and Australia have also presented a joint counter notification regarding
India’s sugar subsidies.
According to their study, over the
four-year period from 2018-19 to 2021-22, India
has provided market price support on sugarcane in excess of the limits set out in
the Agreement on Agriculture (10 per cent of the total value of sugarcane
production) by a margin of 92-101 per cent.