This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Document 02006R0952-20171001
Commission Regulation (EC) No 952/2006 of 29 June 2006 laying down detailed rules for the application of Council Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 as regards the management of the Community market in sugar and the quota system
Consolidated text: Commission Regulation (EC) No 952/2006 of 29 June 2006 laying down detailed rules for the application of Council Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 as regards the management of the Community market in sugar and the quota system
Commission Regulation (EC) No 952/2006 of 29 June 2006 laying down detailed rules for the application of Council Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 as regards the management of the Community market in sugar and the quota system
02006R0952 — EN — 01.10.2017 — 007.001
This text is meant purely as a documentation tool and has no legal effect. The Union's institutions do not assume any liability for its contents. The authentic versions of the relevant acts, including their preambles, are those published in the Official Journal of the European Union and available in EUR-Lex. Those official texts are directly accessible through the links embedded in this document
|
COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 952/2006 of 29 June 2006 (OJ L 178 1.7.2006, p. 39) |
Amended by:
|
|
|
Official Journal |
||
|
No |
page |
date |
||
|
L 131 |
7 |
23.5.2007 |
||
|
L 197 |
4 |
25.7.2008 |
||
|
L 223 |
3 |
21.8.2008 |
||
|
L 290 |
61 |
6.11.2009 |
||
|
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) No 1369/2011 of 21 December 2011 |
L 341 |
38 |
22.12.2011 |
|
|
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) No 994/2013 of 16 October 2013 |
L 276 |
1 |
17.10.2013 |
|
|
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) 2015/2000 of 9 November 2015 |
L 292 |
4 |
10.11.2015 |
|
|
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) 2017/1185 of 20 April 2017 |
L 171 |
113 |
4.7.2017 |
|
COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 952/2006
of 29 June 2006
laying down detailed rules for the application of Council Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 as regards the management of the Community market in sugar and the quota system
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS
Article 1
This Regulation lays down detailed rules for the application of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006, as regards in particular the determination of production, approval of manufacturers and refiners, the price and quota system, the conditions for buying sugar into intervention and selling sugar from intervention and the private storage for the marketing year 2007/2008.
Article 2
Definitions
For the purpose of this Regulation:
‘raw material’ means beet, cane, chicory, cereals, sugar for refining or any other intermediate form of these products intended for processing into an end product;
‘end product’ means sugar, inulin syrup or isoglucose;
‘manufacturer’ means an undertaking producing end products, with the exception of refiners as defined in point 13 of Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006;
‘place of storage’ means a silo or warehouse.
CHAPTER II
ESTABLISHING PRODUCTION
Article 3
Sugar production
For the purposes of Title II of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006, ‘sugar production’ means the total quantity, expressed as white sugar, of:
white sugar;
raw sugar;
invert sugar;
syrups belonging to one of the following categories, hereinafter called ‘syrups’:
sucrose or invert sugar syrups which are at least 70 % pure and are produced from sugar beet,
sucrose or invert sugar syrups which are at least 75 % pure and are produced from sugar cane.
Sugar production shall not include:
quantities of white sugar produced from white sugar, raw sugar or syrups which were not produced in the undertaking which manufactured the white sugar;
quantities of white sugar produced from white sugar, raw sugar, syrups or sugar sweepings which were not produced during the marketing year in which the white sugar was manufactured;
quantities of raw sugar produced from syrups which were not produced in the undertaking which manufactured the raw sugar;
quantities of raw sugar produced from syrups which were not produced during the marketing year in which the raw sugar was manufactured;
quantities of white or raw sugar processed into white sugar during the marketing year in question by the undertaking which produced them;
quantities of syrups processed into sugar or invert sugar during the marketing year in question by the undertaking which produced them;
quantities of sugar, invert sugar and syrups produced under inward-processing arrangements;
quantities of invert sugar produced from syrups which were not produced by the undertaking which manufactured the invert sugar;
quantities of invert sugar produced from syrups which were not produced during the marketing year in which the invert sugar was manufactured.
Sugar production shall be expressed in terms of white sugar in the following way:
in the case of white sugar, disregarding differences in quality;
in the case of raw sugar, on the basis of yield determined in accordance with point III of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 318/2006;
in the case of invert sugar, by multiplying production of invert sugar by the coefficient 1;
in the case of syrups on the basis of extractable sugar content determined in accordance with paragraphs 5 and 6;
in the case of syrups from invert sugar on the basis on sugar content as determined by the High Performance Liquid Chromatography method.
However, the extractable sugar content can be established, for an entire marketing year, on the basis of the real yield in syrups.
Article 4
Isoglucose production
Notification shall be made to the Member State on whose territory each facility is situated. The Member State may require the undertaking to furnish additional information in this respect.
Article 5
Inulin syrup production
‘Purity’ means the percentage of monosaccharides and disaccharides in the dry matter, as determined by the International Commission for Uniform Methods of Sugar Analysis method, hereinafter referred to as the ‘ICUMSA method’ (ICUMSA method GS7/8/4-24).
Inulin syrup production shall be recorded by means of the combination of the following operations:
physical metering of the volume of the product as such immediately after leaving the first evaporator after each hydrolysis and before any operation to separate the glucose and fructose constituents or to produce mixtures;
determination of the dry matter content by refractometry and measurement of the fructose content by weight in the dry state, on the basis of daily representative sampling;
conversion of the fructose content to 80 % by weight in the dry state by multiplying the quantity determined in dry matter by the coefficient representing the ratio between the measured fructose content of that quantity of syrup and 80 %;
expression as sugar/isoglucose equivalent by applying the coefficient 1.9.
This information shall be submitted to the Member State on whose territory each facility is situated. That Member State may require undertakings to furnish additional information, in particular to ensure that the by-products referred to in the first subparagraph are not used as sweetening matter for human consumption on the Community market.
The Member State concerned shall send the Commission not later than 31 January each year a detailed report containing information on the previous year. The first report shall be sent not later than 31 January 2007.
Article 6
Production of an undertaking
For a given marketing year, the total sugar, isoglucose or inulin syrup production of an undertaking shall be the production referred to in paragraph 1:
Where two undertakings make a signed application in writing to the Member State concerned, the quantity of sugar produced by an undertaking (hereinafter called the processor) under contract from materials supplied shall be treated as part of the production of the undertaking (hereinafter called the principal) which had the sugar produced under that contract provided that one of the following conditions is met:
the total sugar production of the processor is less than its quota;
the total sugar production of the processor and of the principal is more than the sum of their quotas; or
for the marketing year 2006/2007, the sum of the thresholds fixed for them in accordance with Article 3(2) of Commission Regulation (EC) No 493/2006 ( 1 );
for the marketing year 2007/2008, the sum of the thresholds fixed for them in accordance with Article 1(2) of Commission Regulation (EC) No 290/2007 ( 2 );
from the marketing year 2008/2009, the sum of the thresholds fixed for them in accordance with Article 19(2) of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 or where applicable with Article 19a(1) of that Regulation.
The total sugar production, as referred to in point (b) of the first subparagraph, of an undertaking shall be the production referred to in paragraph 1 plus the quantity carried forward from the previous marketing year and the quantity produced by processors under contract on behalf of that undertaking, and minus the quantity produced by the undertaking under contract on behalf of principals.
Instead of the quantities actually produced, as referred to in the second subparagraph, the competent authorities of the Member States may, where this total is larger, use estimated production calculated on the basis of the delivery contracts signed by the undertakings.
CHAPTER III
APPROVAL OF MANUFACTURERS AND REFINERS
Article 7
Application for approval
Approval may be obtained by undertakings which apply for it and which operate as:
a sugar manufacturer,
an isoglucose manufacturer,
an inulin syrup manufacturer,
a full-time refiner within the meaning of point 13 of Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006.
The application referred to in the first subparagraph shall be lodged with the competent authority of the Member State or Member States in which the undertaking concerned operates.
An undertaking may apply for approval for one or more of the activities referred to in the first subparagraph.
Article 8
Commitments
For the purposes of approval, the undertaking shall agree in writing to:
notify without delay to the competent authority of the Member State any amendment of the information provided for in Article 7(2);
keep records in accordance with Article 9 and the selling prices established in accordance with Article 13 available to the competent authority of the Member State;
communicate information to the Member State in accordance with Article 21;
provide at the request of the competent authority of the Member State any information or supporting document required for management and checking.
Article 9
Records
The competent authority of the Member State shall determine the records to be kept by all undertakings approved in accordance with Articles 7 and 8, at each of their production sites, and the frequency of such record-keeping, which must be at least monthly.
These records shall be kept by the undertaking for at least three years following the current year and comprise at least the following information:
the quantities of raw material received with, in the case of beet and cane, the sugar content as determined on delivery to the undertaking;
where appropriate, the end products or semi-finished products received;
the quantities of end products obtained, and the quantities of by-products;
the wastage during processing;
the quantities destroyed and the reasons for such destruction;
the quantities of end products dispatched.
Article 10
Checks
The checks shall verify the accuracy of the measuring instruments and laboratory analyses used to determine deliveries of raw materials and their entry into production, the products obtained and stock movements.
Checks shall include verification of the accuracy and completeness of the data used to establish the average monthly selling prices of the undertaking referred to in Article 13(2).
For sugar manufacturers, checks shall also cover compliance with the obligation to pay the minimum price to beet growers.
At least once every two years, checks shall include physical checks on stocks.
Every on-the-spot check shall be the subject of an inspection report signed by the inspector giving the details of the checks carried out. Reports shall indicate in particular:
the date of the check, and the persons present;
the period checked and the quantities involved;
the checking techniques used including, where applicable, reference to sampling methods;
the results of the check and any corrective measures required;
an assessment of the seriousness, extent, permanence and duration of any faults and discrepancies found and all other elements to be taken into consideration for the purposes of applying penalties.
Each inspection report shall be archived and kept for at least three years following the year in which the check is carried out, in a way that ensures that it is readily useable by the Commission departments responsible for checks and inspections.
Article 11
Penalties
Any quantity which has given rise to an incorrect declaration resulting in an unfair financial advantage shall be subject to a payment of EUR 500 per tonne of the quantity in question.
▼M8 —————
CHAPTER IV
PRICES
▼M8 —————
Article 15
Transitional provisions for the transmission of price data
Not later than 20 October 2006, 20 January 2007, 20 April 2007, 20 July 2007, 20 October 2007, 20 January 2008 and 20 April 2008, undertakings approved in accordance with Articles 7 and 8 of this Regulation and processors approved in accordance with Article 17(1) of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 shall communicate to the Commission the prices established in accordance with Article 13(1) of this Regulation during the previous three months.
The reception, processing and storage of the data by the Commission shall be carried out in such a way as to guarantee the confidentiality of data.
Other operators in the sugar sector, in particular buyers, may communicate to the Commission the average price for sugar established in accordance with the arrangements laid down in Article 13. Operators shall give their name, address and business name.
▼M8 —————
Article 16
Delivery contracts
Only contracts concluded prior to sowing and in any event:
shall be regarded as pre-sowing contracts.
Article 16a
Purchase terms for beet
Agreements within the trade and delivery contracts referred to in Article 50(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1234/2007 shall conform to purchase terms laid down in Annex II of this Regulation.
Article 17
Price increases and reductions
For the purposes of applying the price increases and reductions provided for in Article 5(3) of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006, the minimum price for quota beet referred to in Article 5(1) of that Regulation shall, for each 0,1 % of sucrose content, be:
increased by not less than:
0,9 % for contents exceeding 16 % but not exceeding 18 %,
0,7 % for contents exceeding 18 % but not exceeding 19 %,
0,5 % for contents exceeding 19 % but not exceeding 20 %;
reduced by not more than:
0,9 % for contents below 16 % but not below 15,5 %,
1 % for contents below 15,5 % but not below 14,5 %.
The price for beet with a sucrose content in excess of 20 % shall not be less than the minimum price adjusted in accordance with point (a)(iii).
Delivery contracts, and agreements within the trade as referred to in Article 6 of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006, may provide, compared to the increases and reductions referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, for:
further increases for sucrose contents above 20 %;
further reductions for sucrose contents below 14,5 %.
These contracts and agreements may, in the case of beet with a sucrose content below 14,5 %, define beet suitable for processing into sugar if further reductions for sucrose contents below 14,5 % but above the minimum sucrose content specified in that definition are laid down in such contracts and agreements.
If the definition referred to in the second subparagraph is not included in the contracts and agreements, the Member State concerned may lay down that definition. In that case it shall, at the same time, fix the further reductions referred to in that subparagraph.
CHAPTER V
QUOTAS AND PRODUCTION CHARGE
Article 18
Additional sugar quotas
If it allocates the additional quota to an undertaking, the Member State shall indicate the marketing year from which the allocation takes effect. However, allocations after 1 January 2007 shall take effect from the 2007/08 marketing year.
Member States shall notify to each sugar undertaking concerned the amount due at least one month before the deadline referred to in the first subparagraph and on 31 January 2008 at the latest.
Article 19
Additional isoglucose quota
If the undertaking has not paid the one-off amount by the deadline referred to in the first subparagraph, the additional isoglucose quotas shall not be considered as allocated to the undertaking concerned.
Member States shall notify to each isoglucose undertaking concerned the amounts due at least one month before the deadline referred to in paragraph 2 and on 30 November of the marketing year from which the quota is allocated at the latest.
▼M8 —————
Article 20a
Production charge
From the marketing year 2007/08, Member States shall, on 31 January each year at the latest, notify to each approved sugar and isoglucose producer the production charge to be paid for the current marketing year.
▼M8 —————
CHAPTER VI
PUBLIC STORAGE
SECTION 1
Offers for intervention
Article 23
Offers
The quantities laid down in the ►M2 Annex I ◄ to this Regulation shall be amended, where appropriate, in the last quarter of each marketing year, on the basis of unused quantities in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 39(2) of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 and within the limit of the total quantity laid down in Article 18(2) of that Regulation.
Article 24
Approval of the place of storage
Approval shall be granted at the manufacturer's request to the intervention agency, to all places of storage which:
are suitable for keeping sugar in good condition;
are situated in a place which provides the transport facilities necessary for removal of the sugar;
allow separate storage of the quantities offered for intervention.
Additional conditions may be imposed by the intervention agencies.
Article 25
Minimum sugar quality
Sugar offered to intervention shall meet the following requirements:
it must have been produced within a quota during the marketing year in which the offer is made;
it must be in crystal form.
In the case of raw cane sugar, the sugar shall have a safety factor not exceeding 0,30.
In the case of raw beet sugar, the sugar shall have:
The safety factor shall be determined by dividing the percentage moisture content of the sugar concerned by the difference between 100 and the degree of polarisation of that sugar.
Article 26
Lots
All sugar offered for intervention shall be put up in lots.
For the purposes of this Section, ‘lot’ means at least 2 000 tonnes of sugar of uniform quality and packing, all of which is stored in the same place.
Article 27
Content of the offer
Offers made to an intervention agency shall indicate:
the name and address of the party making the offer;
the place of storage in which the sugar is stored at the time the offer is made;
the removal capacity guaranteed for the removal of the sugar offered;
the net quantity of sugar being offered;
the nature and quality of the sugar offered, and the marketing year in which it was produced;
the type of packing of the sugar.
Article 28
Examination of the offers
SECTION 2
Storage
Article 29
Storage contracts
Storage contracts shall take effect five weeks after the date of acceptance of the offer and shall expire at the end of the ten-day period during which removal of the quantity of sugar concerned is completed.
For the purposes of this Article, ‘10-day period’ means one of the following periods of a calendar month: from the first to the 10th, from the 11th to the 20th, or from the 21st to the end of the month.
Storage contracts shall, in particular:
provide for expiry of the contract under the conditions set out in this Regulation after at least ten days' notice has been given;
specify the amount of the storage costs to be borne by the intervention agency.
Article 30
Transfer of ownership
Article 31
Quality and packing standards
SECTION 3
Conditions for intervention buying-in
Article 32
Intervention price for and quality of white sugar
The intervention price for white sugar shall be:
White sugar shall be classified into four grades as follows:
Grade 1: sugar which is superior in quality to the standard quality;
Grade 2: sugar of the standard quality as defined in point II of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 318/2006;
Grades 3 and 4: sugar which is inferior in quality to the standard quality.
Grade 1 sugar shall have the following characteristics:
sound and fair marketable quality, dry, in homogeneously granulated, free-flowing crystals;
maximum moisture content: 0,06 %;
maximum invert sugar content: 0,04 %;
the number of points shall not exceed a total of eight, or:
One point shall correspond to:
0,0018 % ash content determined according to the ICUMSA Method at 28° Brix;
0,5 unit of colour type determined according to the Brunswick Method;
7,5 units of solution colour determined according to the ICUMSA Method.
Grade 3 sugar shall have the following characteristics:
sound and fair marketable quality, dry, in homogeneously-granulated, free-flowing crystals;
minimum polarisation: 99,7°S;
maximum moisture content: 0,06 %;
maximum invert sugar content: 0,04 %;
colour type: maximum No 6 determined according to the Brunswick Method.
The intervention price fixed in paragraph 1 shall be reduced by:
EUR 7,30 per tonne for Grade 3 sugar;
EUR 13,10 per tonne for Grade 4 sugar.
Article 33
Intervention price for raw sugar
The intervention price for raw sugar shall be:
The intervention price fixed in paragraph 1 shall be:
increased where the yield of the sugar is more than 92 %;
reduced where the yield of the sugar is less than 92 %.
Article 34
Payment period
The intervention agency shall make payment no earlier than 120 days from the day on which the offer is accepted, provided the checks to verify the weight and quality of the offered lots have been conducted in accordance with Section 4.
SECTION 4
Checks
Article 35
Sample for checking quality
Within the time limit referred to in Article 34, four representative samples shall be taken for analysis either by experts approved by the competent authorities of the Member State concerned or by experts agreed upon by the intervention agency and the seller. One sample shall be given to each of the contracting parties. The other two samples shall be kept by the expert or by a laboratory approved by the competent authorities.
Each sample shall be analysed twice and the mean of the results shall be taken as the result of the analysis of the sample concerned.
Article 36
Disputes over quality
Where there is a difference between the results of the analyses arranged by the seller and the buyer in accordance with Article 35, the arithmetic mean of the two results shall be conclusive for establishing the grade of the sugar concerned if the difference is:
However, at the request of either of the contracting parties, an arbitral analysis may be carried out by the laboratory referred to in the first paragraph of Article 35. In that case, the arithmetic mean of the result of the arbitral analysis and of the results of the seller's and the buyer's analyses, whichever is closer to the result of the arbitral analysis, shall be adopted.
This mean shall be conclusive for establishing the grade of the sugar concerned. If the result of the arbitral analysis lies midway between the results of the analyses arranged by the seller and the buyer, the arbitral analysis alone shall be conclusive for establishing the grade of the sugar concerned.
However, the differences referred to in paragraph 1 shall be replaced by:
This mean shall be conclusive for establishing the yield of the raw sugar concerned. If the result of the arbitral analysis lies midway between the results of the analyses arranged by the seller and the buyer, the arbitral analysis alone shall be conclusive for establishing the yield of the raw sugar concerned.
The costs of an arbitral analysis as referred to in paragraph 2 shall be shared equally by the intervention agency and the seller.
The costs of an arbitral analysis as referred to in paragraph 3 shall be borne by the contracting party which contested the result of the analysis made under Article 35.
Article 37
Checks on the places of storage
The competent authority responsible for control shall carry out unannounced checks on the places of storage in accordance with Article 4 of Commission Regulation (EC) No 2148/96 ( 3 ).
Article 38
Checks on weight and related costs
The seller shall take all steps necessary to allow the experts to check the weight and to take samples.
The quantity can be established on the basis of the stock accounts, which must meet professional specifications and the intervention agency's requirements, provided that:
the stock records show the weight recorded on weighing and the physical quality characteristics at the time of weighing. The weighing may not have been carried out more than 10 months previously;
the storekeeper declares that the lot offered corresponds in all respects to the details contained in the stock records;
the quality characteristics established at the time of weighing are the same as those of the representative samples.
SECTION 5
Intervention sales
Article 39
Sales
For the purposes of this Section, ‘intended use’ means:
animal feed;
export;
other purposes, to be determined as required.
The purpose of the tendering procedure shall be to determine the selling price, the amount of the denaturing premium or the amount of the export refund, as the case may be.
Article 40
Notice of invitation to tender
The intervention agency shall send the invitation to tender, and any amendments thereof, to the Commission prior to publication.
The invitation shall indicate in particular:
the name and address of the intervention agency issuing the invitation to tender;
the terms of the tendering procedure;
the time limit for submission of tenders;
the lots of sugar put up for tender, and for each lot:
For the purposes of this Section, ‘lot’ means a quantity of sugar of uniform quality, packaged in the same way and stored in the same place. The minimum bid for each partial invitation to tender shall be 250 tonnes.
Article 41
Tender
Award to successful tenderers shall be equivalent to the conclusion of a sales contract for the quantity of sugar awarded. Award shall be made, as the case may be, on the basis of the following factors contained in the tender:
the price to be paid by the successful tenderer;
the amount of the denaturing premium;
the amount of the export refund.
The price to be paid by the successful tenderer shall be:
the price indicated in the tender, in the case of paragraph 1(a);
the price indicated in the terms of the invitation to tender, in the case of paragraph 1(b) and (c).
Article 42
Terms of the tendering procedure
For the purposes of the tendering procedure, the following terms of the tendering procedure shall be determined when the decision is taken to issue an invitation to tender:
the total quantity or quantities put up for tender;
the intended use;
the time limit for submission of tenders;
the price to be paid by the successful tenderer if the sugar is intended for animal feed or for export.
Additional terms may be determined in the decision is taken to issue an invitation to tender, in particular:
the minimum price for sugar put up for sale for a purpose other than animal feed or export;
the maximum amount of the denaturing premium or the export refund;
the minimum quantity per tenderer or per lot;
the maximum quantity per tenderer or per lot;
the specific period of validity of the denaturing premium certificate or export licence.
Article 43
Standing invitation to tender
During the period of validity of the standing invitation to tender, partial invitations to tender shall be issued.
Article 44
Submission of the tender
Tenders shall state:
the reference of the invitation to tender;
the name and address of the tenderer;
the number of the lot;
the quantity tendered for;
per tonne, as appropriate, expressed in euro to two decimal places:
The intervention agency may require additional information.
Tenders shall not be valid unless:
proof is supplied before expiry of the time limit for submission of tenders that the tendering security of EUR 200 per tonne of sugar has been lodged;
they include a declaration by the tenderer undertaking, for any quantity of sugar awarded for either a denaturing premium or an export refund:
A tender may stipulate that it is to be treated as submitted only if the award:
relates to all or a specified part of the quantity indicated in the tender;
is made not later than a time and date specified by the tenderer.
Article 45
Examination of tenders
Article 46
Fixing amounts
Where the terms of the tendering procedure do not specify either a minimum price or a maximum amount for the denaturing premium or the export refund, these shall be fixed in accordance with Article 39(2) of Regulation (EC) No 318/2006 after the tenders have been examined, in the light of market conditions and potential outlets. However, a decision may be taken to make no award.
Article 47
Award of the tender
If the lot is not completely accounted for by that tender, the remainder shall be awarded to other tenderers depending on the amount of their tender, starting with either the next highest price or the next lowest denaturing premium or export refund.
If several tenderers propose either the same price or the same amount for the denaturing premium or the export refund for one lot or part of a lot, the intervention agency shall award the quantity concerned by one of the following means:
in proportion to the quantities indicated in the tenders in question;
by dividing that quantity between the tenderers in agreement with them;
by the drawing of lots.
Article 48
Rights and obligations arising from awards
If the sugar is intended for animal feed, awards shall:
confer the right to the issue of a certificate for the quantity for which the denaturing premium is awarded, showing in particular the denaturing premium specified in the tender;
entail the obligation to apply for such a certificate for that quantity to the intervention agency to which the tender was submitted.
If the sugar is intended for export, awards shall:
confer the right to the issue of an export licence for the quantity for which the export refund is awarded, showing in particular the export refund and, in the case of white sugar, the grade specified in the invitation to tender;
entail the obligation to apply for such a licence for that quantity and, in the case of white sugar, that grade, to the intervention agency to which the tender was submitted.
Article 49
Statement of award
Statements of award shall indicate at least:
the procedure to which the tender relates;
the number of the lot and the quantity awarded;
the price, the amount of the denaturing premium or the amount of the export refund, as the case may be, accepted for the quantity awarded.
Article 50
Removal of the sugar purchased
However, the intervention agency may if necessary allow a longer period for removing particular lots from storage where there are technical difficulties regarding removal from storage.
Article 51
Removal order
However, removal orders may be issued for parts of that quantity.
Removal orders shall be issued by the intervention agency concerned at the request of the interested party.
The security or negotiable instrument shall correspond to the price to be paid by the successful tenderer for the quantity of sugar for which a removal order has been requested.
Article 52
Payment
Article 53
Transfer of ownership
Article 54
Determining the grade or yield
Articles 35 and 36 shall apply for the purposes of determining the grade or yield of the sugar concerned when it is removed from storage.
However, the contracting parties may agree, after the award has been made, that the grade or yield determined when the sugar was bought in by the intervention agency shall apply to the sugar sold under the tendering procedure.
Article 55
Adjustment of the price of sugar
Where application of Articles 35 and 36 establishes that the yield of raw sugar is other than that indicated in the invitation to tender:
the price of the sugar shall be adjusted in accordance with Article 33;
the amount of the denaturing premium or export refund shall be adjusted by multiplying it by a coefficient equal to the yield established divided by the yield indicated in the invitation to tender.
Article 56
Release of the security
Except in cases of force majeure, the tendering security shall be released only for the quantity for which:
either the successful tenderer has:
or no award is made.
Article 57
Notifications of quantities
Member States shall notify to the Commission, as soon as they know them, the quantities of white sugar and of raw sugar:
▼M3 —————
CHAPTER VII
TRANSITIONAL AND FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 58
Communications and notifications
The communications and notifications referred to in Article 5(3) and in Articles 12, 21 and 22 shall be made in accordance with Commission Regulation (EC) No 792/2009 ( 4 ).
Article 59
Repeals
Regulations (EC) No 1261/2001, (EC) No 1262/2001 and (EC) No 314/2002 are hereby repealed.
However, Regulations (EC) No 1261/2001 and (EC) No 314/2002 shall continue to apply to production in the 2005/06 marketing year and Regulation (EC) No 1262/2001 shall continue to apply to sugar accepted into intervention before 10 February 2006.
Article 60
Entry into force
This Regulation shall enter into force on the day of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
It shall apply from 1 July 2006.
Articles 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37 and 38 shall apply only until 30 September 2010.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
ANNEX I
Quantities by Member State referred to in Article 23(3) for the marketing year 2007/08
|
(tonnes) |
|
|
Member State |
Quantities |
|
Belgium |
31 615 |
|
Bulgaria |
170 |
|
Czech Republic |
13 346 |
|
Denmark |
16 213 |
|
Germany |
130 985 |
|
Greece |
5 687 |
|
Spain |
31 790 |
|
France (metropolitan) |
130 447 |
|
France (overseas departments) |
17 208 |
|
Italy |
27 012 |
|
Lithuania |
4 013 |
|
Hungary |
10 699 |
|
Netherlands |
33 376 |
|
Austria |
14 541 |
|
Poland |
63 513 |
|
Portugal (mainland) |
537 |
|
Portugal (Azores) |
357 |
|
Romania |
3 912 |
|
Slovakia |
5 278 |
|
Finland |
3 225 |
|
Sweden |
12 306 |
|
United Kingdom |
43 769 |
ANNEX II
Purchase terms for beets, referred to in Article 16a
POINT I
For the purposes of this Annex ‘Contracting Parties’ means:
sugar undertakings (hereinafter referred to as manufacturers), and
beet sellers (hereinafter referred to as sellers).
POINT II
1. Delivery contracts shall be made in writing for a specified quantity of quota beet.
2. Delivery contracts shall specify whether an additional quantity of beet may be supplied, and under what terms.
POINT III
1. Delivery contracts shall indicate the purchase prices for the quantities of beet referred to in point (a) and, if appropriate, point (b), of Article 50(3) of Regulation (EC) No 1234/2007. In the case of the quantities referred to in the point a) of Article 50(3), those prices may not be lower than the minimum price for quota beet referred to in Article 49(1).
2. Delivery contracts shall lay down a fixed sugar content for beet. They shall include a conversion scale showing the different sugar contents and factors for converting the quantities of beet supplied into quantities corresponding to the sugar content shown in the delivery contract.
The scale shall be based on the yields corresponding to the different sugar contents.
3. Where a seller has signed a delivery contract with a manufacturer for the delivery of beet as referred to in point (a) of Article 50(3), all deliveries by that seller, converted in accordance with paragraph 2 of this Point, shall be considered to be deliveries within the meaning of point (a) of Article 50(3), up to the quantity of beet specified in the delivery contract.
4. Manufacturers producing a quantity of sugar lower than their quota beet for which they have signed pre-sowing delivery contracts under point (a) of Article 50(3), shall distribute the quantity of beet corresponding to any additional production up to the amount of their quota among the sellers with whom they have signed pre-sowing delivery contracts within the meaning of point (a) of Article 50(3).
Agreements within the trade may derogate from this provision.
POINT IV
1. Delivery contracts shall contain provisions concerning the staggering and normal duration of beet deliveries.
2. Provisions referred to in paragraph 1 shall be those applicable during the previous marketing year, taking account of the level of actual production; agreements within the trade may derogate therefrom.
POINT V
1. Delivery contracts shall provide for beet collection places.
2. Where sellers and manufacturers have already signed a delivery contract for the previous marketing year, the collection places agreed upon by them for deliveries during that marketing year shall remain in operation. Agreements within the trade may derogate from this provision.
3. Delivery contracts shall provide that loading and transport costs from the collection places are to be borne by the manufacturer subject to special agreements based on local rules or usages in operation before the previous marketing year.
4. However, in Denmark, Greece, Spain, Ireland, Portugal, Finland and the United Kingdom, where beet is delivered free-at-factory, delivery contracts shall require manufacturers to contribute to loading and transport costs and shall stipulate the percentage or amounts.
POINT VI
1. Delivery contracts shall provide for reception points for beet.
2. Where sellers and manufacturers have already signed a delivery contract for the previous marketing year, the reception points agreed upon by them for deliveries during that marketing year shall remain in operation. Agreements within the trade may derogate from this provision.
POINT VII
1. Delivery contracts shall provide for the sugar content to be determined using the polarimetric method. A sample of the beet shall be drawn at the time of reception.
2. Agreements within the trade may provide for samples to be drawn at another stage. In such cases, the delivery contract shall provide for a correction to compensate for any drop in the sugar content between the reception and the drawing of the sample.
POINT VIII
Delivery contracts shall provide for gross weight, tare and sugar content to be determined using one of the following procedures:
jointly, by the manufacturer and the beet growers' trade organisation, if an agreement within the trade so provides;
by the manufacturer, under the supervision of the beet growers' trade organisation;
by the manufacturer, under the supervision of an expert recognised by the Member State concerned, provided the seller defrays the costs thereof.
POINT IX
1. Delivery contracts shall require manufacturers to do one or more of the following for the whole quantity of beet delivered:
to return the fresh pulp from the tonnage of beet delivered free of charge to the seller, ex-factory;
to return part of that pulp, pressed, dried or dried and molassed, free of charge to the seller, ex-factory;
to return the pulp, pressed or dried, to the seller, ex-factory; in this case, the manufacturer may require the seller to pay the pressing or drying costs;
to pay the seller compensation which takes account of the possibilities of selling the pulp concerned.
When parts of the whole quantity of beet delivered are subject to different treatment, the delivery contract shall impose more than one of the obligations provided for in the first subparagraph.
2. Agreements within the trade may provide for pulp to be delivered at a stage other than that referred to in paragraph 1(a), (b) and (c).
POINT X
1. Delivery contracts shall fix the time limits for any advance payments and for payment of the purchase price for beet.
2. The time limits referred to in paragraph 1 shall be those valid during the previous marketing year. Agreements within the trade may derogate from this provision.
POINT XI
Where delivery contracts lay down rules covering matters which are dealt with in this Annex, or where they contain provisions governing other matters, their provisions and effects shall not conflict with this Annex.
POINT XII
1. Agreements within the trade as described in Annex III, Part II, point 11 to Regulation (EC) No 1234/2007 shall contain arbitration clauses.
2. Where agreements within the trade at Community, regional or local level lay down rules covering matters which are dealt with in this Regulation, or where they contain provisions governing other matters, their provisions and effects shall not conflict with this Annex.
3. Agreements referred to in paragraph 2 lay down, in particular:
rules on the distribution to sellers of quantities of beet which the manufacturer decides to buy prior to sowing, for the manufacture of sugar within the limits of the quota;
rules on distribution as referred to in Point III(4);
the conversion scale referred to in Point III(2);
rules on the choice and supply of seeds of the varieties of beet to be produced;
the minimum sugar content of beet to be delivered;
a requirement for consultation between the manufacturer and the sellers' representatives before the starting date of beet deliveries is fixed;
the payment of premiums to sellers for early or late deliveries;
details of:
the part of the pulp referred to in Point IX(1)(b),
the costs referred to in Point IX(1)(c),
the compensation referred to in Point IX(1)(d);
the removal of pulp by the seller;
without prejudice to Article 49(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1234/2007, rules on how any difference between the reference price and the actual selling price of the sugar is to be allocated between the manufacturer and sellers.
POINT XIII
Where there is no set agreement within the trade as to how the quantities of beet intended for the manufacture of sugar within the quota limits which the manufacturer offers to buy before sowing should be allocated among the sellers, the Member State concerned may itself lay down rules for such allocation.
Those rules may also grant to traditional sellers of beet to cooperatives delivery rights other than those which they would enjoy if they belonged to such cooperatives.
( 1 ) OJ L 89, 28.3.2006, p. 11.
( 2 ) OJ L 78, 17.3.2007, p. 20.
( 3 ) OJ L 288, 9.11.1996, p. 6.
( 4 ) OJ L 228, 1.9.2009, p. 3.