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Document 52001DC0677

    Report from the Commission to the Council on the quota system for the production of potato starch

    /* COM/2001/0677 final */

    52001DC0677

    Report from the Commission to the Council on the quota system for the production of potato starch /* COM/2001/0677 final */


    REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL on the quota system for the production of potato starch

    (presented by the Commission)

    1. Introduction: The need for the Report

    Article 3(1) of Council Regulation (EC) No 1868/94 of 27 July 1994 establishing a quota system in relation to the production of potato starch [1] stipulates that on or before 31 October 2001 the Commission must present to the Council a report on the allocation of quota within the Community, accompanied if necessary by appropriate proposals. This report is to take account of possible changes in the compensatory payment and of the development of the potato starch and cereal starch markets.

    [1] OJ L 197, 30.7.1994, p. 4.

    Article 3(2) of the above Regulation stipulates that on or before 31 December 2001 and thereafter at three-yearly intervals the Council, acting on the basis of Article 37 of the Treaty, must allocate the quota between Member States on the basis of the report referred to in Article 3(1) for use in the following three marketing years.

    The current quotas are fixed by Regulation (EC) No 1868/94 until the end of the 2001/02 marketing year (June 2002).

    2. The quota system

    The price arrangements and direct aid for potato starch are integrated into the market organisation for cereals (Council Regulation (EEC) No 1766/92 [2]).

    [2] OJ L 181, 1.7.1992, p. 21.

    Potato starch is in direct competition with cereal starch. The restrictions on production applied in the cereals sector, in particular set-aside, and the increase in production of potato starch at the beginning of the 1990s led the Council to limit production of potato starch from 1995/96 onwards by introducing a quota system (Regulation (EC) No 1868/94), with the following features:

    - the quota is fixed by Member State and then allocated between potato starch manufacturers in the form of sub-quotas,

    - potato producers receive a payment per tonne of starch in the potatoes delivered to the potato starch manufacturers, similar to the per-hectare payment for cereals,

    - potato starch manufacturers receive a premium based on their sub-quota to offset certain structural disadvantages in relation to cereal starch producers (fewer by-products to develop, shorter manufacturing period, high anti-pollution costs, etc.). Payment of the premium is subject to the condition that manufacturers pay the minimum price to producers of potatoes intended for potato starch manufacture.

    Potato producers and potato starch manufacturers must conclude cultivation contracts each year to prevent any overrun of the sub-quota. These contracts state in particular the projected quantity of starch to be delivered and the minimum price to be paid by the manufacturer. A manufacturer may not take delivery of potatoes that are not covered by a cultivation contract. Apart from the 5% flexibility clause, any potato starch produced in excess of the sub-quota must be exported from the Community, as such and with no export refund, before 1 January following the end of the marketing year in question.

    Detailed implementing rules are set out in Commission Regulation (EC) No 97/95 [3] which clarifies a number of issues, such as the introduction of cultivation contracts, the minimum starch content, the determination of the weight and starch content of potatoes on delivery to potato starch manufacturers, rules relating to exports without refund, inspection arrangements and penalties, rules applicable to mergers, changes of ownership and the commencement or termination of commercial activities by potato starch manufacturers.

    [3] OJ L 16, 24.1.1995, p. 3.

    3. Decisions under Agenda 2000

    Regulation (EC) No 1868/94 was amended by Regulation (EC) No 1252/1999 [4] within the context of the Agenda 2000 price decisions and, at the same time, the minimum price and the payment for potato producers laid down in Article 8 of Regulation (EEC) No 1766/92 were amended by Regulation (EC) No 1253/1999 [5]. The compensation for the fall in prices in the potato starch sector was fixed at a higher rate than that in the cereals sector, while budget neutrality was ensured by reducing the quotas fixed by Regulation (EC) No 1868/94 for the 2000/01 and 2001/02 marketing years.

    [4] OJ L 160, 26.6.1999, p. 15.

    [5] OJ L 160, 26.6.1999, p. 18.

    The minimum price and the payment for potato producers laid down in Article 8 of Regulation (EEC) No 1766/92 may be amended from the 2002/03 marketing year (mid-term review of the Agenda 2000 reform package) in the light of a final reduction in the intervention price for cereals.

    4. Development of potato starch production and quotas

    Tables 1 and 2 below show the development of the production of potato starch within the context of the quota arrangements, and the different quotas fixed by Member State.

    Table 1 Development of the production of potato starch within the context of the quota arrangements(1)

    1 000 tonnes

    >TABLE POSITION>

    (1) as laid down in Regulations (EC) Nos 1868/94 and 97/95, including the maximum 5% flexibility, not including quantities exported without a refund.

    Source: Member State communications under Article 20 of Regulation (EC) No 97/95.

    Table 2 Development of quotas fixed for the production of potato starch

    1 000 tonnes

    >TABLE POSITION>

    (1) of the reserve of 110 000 tonnes, 104 554 t have been allocated.

    >TABLE POSITION>

    Source: Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 1868/94, as last amended by Regulation (EC) No 1252/1999 (Agenda 2000).

    Since the incorporation in 1996/97 of the reserve created for Germany (to cover production resulting from investments irreversibly undertaken before 31 January 1994), EU production of potato starch has fluctuated very slightly, between 1.8 and 1.9 million tonnes per year, except for 1998/99 when it fell to 1.66 million tonnes as a result of poor weather conditions.

    Over the entire period, production remained very close to the quota, with two extremes:

    1998/99: - 11% as a result of poor weather conditions

    2000/01: + 2% with a reduced quota (Agenda 2000) and good weather conditions.

    The 2000/01 marketing year progressed under relatively good conditions: the sizeable harvest of starch potatoes and favourable market outlook with stocks initially at a relatively low level, according to professional sources, led a number of potato starch manufacturers to make use of the 5% flexibility clause under Article 6(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1868/94. Moreover, a number of manufacturers, having produced over and above their available quota, will have to export those quantities without any export refunds before 1 January 2002 under Article 6(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1868/94 (total quantity involved: 15 000 tonnes).

    The earliest indications for the 2001/02 marketing year point to a smaller harvest of starch potatoes as a result of poor weather conditions. As a result, potato starch production will probably fall in excess of the reduction in quotas and quantities used within the context of flexibility in the previous marketing year. The market appears less favourable, according to professional sources, in particular with stocks rising again at the beginning of the marketing year.

    Table 3 and the following graph show the development of potato starch production for the EU as a whole compared to the quota. Apart from in 1995/96 and 1998/99 (poor weather conditions), EU production remained close to the quota fixed.

    Table 3 Development of potato starch production and EU basic quota

    1

    >TABLE POSITION>

    000 tonnes

    >REFERENCE TO A GRAPHIC>

    Graph: Development of potato starch production and EU basic quota

    5. Development of the cereal and potato starch sector

    5.1. Exports of cereal starch and potato starch

    The world market constitutes an important outlet for the cereal starch and potato starch sector, including starch-derived products.

    The following two tables show the development of exports of the main products in this sector.

    Table 4a has been taken from the EUROSTAT/COMEXT database. However, it does not include certain quantities in view of their confidential statistical nature.

    Table 4a Development of exports of cereal starch and potato starch

    1000 t cereal starch equivalent

    >TABLE POSITION>

    Source: EUROSTAT/COMEXT.

    Table 4b shows another evaluation, based on Member State communications to DG Agriculture (export licences for products in Annex I to the Treaty) and to DG Enterprise (payments of export refunds for exports of non-Annex I products).

    Table 4b Development of exports of cereal starch and potato starch

    1000 t cereal starch equivalent

    >TABLE POSITION>

    Sources: - cereal starch and potato starch, as such, and glucose: DG Agriculture/Member States, application for export licences,

    - modified cereal starches: DG Enterprise/Member States - monthly communications of payments.

    According to Table 4b, the total exports taken into account increased from around 1.1 million tonnes in 1995 to 1.4 million tonnes in 2000, with two years - 1996 and 1999 - witnessing a decline. The two main categories covered are cereal starch and potato starch as such, which increased from 0.5 to 0.6 million tonnes, and modified starch produced mainly from potato starch and maize starch, which increased from 0.4 to over 0.5 million tonnes in the same period. Exports of glucose produced mainly from maize and wheat starch increased from 0.2 to 0.3 million tonnes between 1995 and 2000.

    Exports of potato starch and derived products increased over that period, reflecting demand for specific products.

    Moreover, certain quantities of cereal starch and potato starch are exported in numerous non-Annex I products, other than modified starches. In view of the complexity of the range of products concerned, these are not included in the above Tables 4a and 4b.

    5.2. Production of cereal starch and potato starch

    Table 5 Development of potato starch and cereal starch production (estimates)

    million tonnes

    >TABLE POSITION>

    Source: - for cereal starch: AAC (Association of the Cereal Starch Industries of the EU), - for potato starch: communications from the Member States under Article 20 of Regulation (EC) No 97/95, including production outside the quotas, in particular some manufacturing losses below those provided for in Regulation (EC) No 97/95.

    Since 1995/96, cereal starch and potato starch production in the Community has grown at a rate of around 5% a year on average, largely to the benefit of wheat starch. Since production of potato starch has been limited by the quota system, the share of potato starch in starch production as a whole is tending to fall below 25%.

    6. Proposal

    Based on the information presented in this report, in particular as regards the market balance between potato starch and cereal starch, the Commission is proposing to extend the quotas currently fixed for 2001/02 for a period of three years.

    Under Article 3(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1868/94, on or before 31 October 2001 the Commission must present to the Council a report on the allocation of quota within the Community, accompanied if necessary by appropriate proposals. The Commission would however like to point out that the Court of Auditors recently published a report on the potato and cereal starch sectors (1 October 2001), in which it sets out a number of observations and recommendations which the Commission is studying in detail in order to formulate a response. However, in view of the 31 October deadline, it has not been possible to finalise this analysis and to draw the necessary conclusions, which would have allowed the Commission to incorporate this information and probably to amend this report and the proposal for a Regulation.

    The Commission has also arranged for a study to evaluate the cereal starch and potato starch sector, which is still underway. The Commission expects the final report to be available in the next few months. It will also have to take this study into account once it has been published, and draw the relevant conclusions.

    The Commission would also like to point out that Article 8 of Regulation (EC) No 1766/92, as amended by Regulation (EC) No 1253/1999, stipulates that the minimum price and the payment for potato producers must be adapted in the light of the final reduction in the intervention price for cereals in accordance with the decisions taken within the framework of Agenda 2000 (mid-term review).

    Its proposal to extend the existing quotas is therefore subject to any measures which might subsequently be needed on the basis of the conclusions from the above reports which are currently under review.

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