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Al Khaleej Sugar: Regional overcapacity limits output

Jamal al-Ghurair said that Al Khaleej Sugar in Dubai is currently operating at 70% of its capacity, as Middle East sugar refineries struggle with overcapacity. This was revealed by the managing director of the company, Jamal al-Ghurair on Tuesday, during the Dubai Sugar Conference.

"In the Middle East, there is 60-70% more capacity than the Middle East needs, so the refineries in the region are not operating at full capacity." He told reporters at the conference that some refineries were operating at 30%-40% capacity.

Al Khaleej Sugar is the largest refinery in the world of sweeteners based at a port.

Al Ghurair stated that India's return as an exporter to the global sugar market was impacting the Middle East sugar prices.

India has permitted exports of 1 million metric tonnes of sugar for the current season until September 2025 in order to assist mills and the second largest producer of sugar in the world to export surplus stocks while also helping to prop up local prices.

"India's dump had stopped, but has returned again. He said that the UAE was not the only place where dumping took place.

Al Ghurair stated that there are no plans to export sugar to Syria after the new administration has taken over the war-ravaged nation following the ouster Bashar al Assad on December 8th.

"I'm not sure if we'll export to Syria. This is all new. "We must first have stability in the country before we export," he said.

Production is currently 1.6 million tonnes per year, with 80% of the production going to exports and 20% to the local market.

He said that there was no increase in demand, and that the UAE's ability to expand manufacturing of sugar-related products would determine whether or not consumption increases locally.

The refinery gets most of its raw sugar from Brazil, which is the top exporter in the world.

Al Ghurair stated that the factory, which processes sugarbeet in Egypt, has been operating for two years, but it was not running at full capacity because of a price cap linked to Egypt's subsidy program. Reporting by Mohamed Ezz, Maha El Dahan; Writing by Nigel Hunt. Editing by Louise Heavens & Christina Fincher.

(source: Reuters)