Qatar to build sugar refinery to avoid boycott
disruptions: sources
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[July 25, 2018]
By Jonathan Saul, Tom Finn and Maha El Dahan
LONDON/DUBAI (Reuters) - Qatar is building
a sugar refinery in a bid to avoid supply disruptions after neighboring
Gulf Arab states severed economic and political ties with Doha more than
a year ago, sources say.
In normal trading conditions, building a refinery in Qatar would make
little commercial sense because of depressed sugar prices, surplus world
stocks and the presence of regional refineries that could provide
supplies, the sources said.
But they said Qatar, with its huge financial resources generated from
gas exports and as host of the 2022 World Cup, wanted to avoid any
shortfall for the desert nation that depends heavily on imports to feed
its 2.7 million population.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt severed ties
with Qatar in June 2017, accusing it of fomenting regional unrest,
supporting terrorism and getting too close to Iran. Doha denies all the
accusations.
"This will strengthen our independence and by God’s will help break
restrictions imposed on our economy. Now, more than ever, we must be
able to support ourselves," a senior Economy Ministry official told
Reuters.
He said the refinery would be near Hamad port, 40 km (25 miles) south of
Doha, and would start up by the end of 2019 or early 2020. The official
declined to provide further details.
Two sources with knowledge of the initiative said the new refinery would
have capacity to produce 110,000 tonnes of sugar a year, exceeding
annual consumption estimated at 80,000 tonnes. The sources did not give
a value for the project.
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The Qatari flag is seen
at a park near Doha Corniche, in Doha, Qatar February 17, 2018.
REUTERS/Ibraheem al Omari/File Photo
A presentation by the Transport and Communications Ministry showed the planned
plant would refine 300 tonnes of sugar a day, saying operations were expected to
start by 2020.
Qatar previously relied on imports of white sugar from the UAE and Saudi Arabia.
Once the boycott started, Qatar turned to supplies from India and other
producers.
Food prices rose after the boycott, with Saudi Arabia cutting off imports by
closing Qatar's only land border.
A Middle East based trade source said the project did not make economic sense
based on the investment needed to adapt Hamad port and the cost of packaging,
which would need to be imported.
Another regional trade source said the refinery was likely to bring in raw sugar
from Brazil to be refined into white sugar. "This has to be viewed as a
strategic project for Qatar," the source said.
(Editing by Edmund Blair)
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