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Arable Farming
Cropping
British Sugar life after quotas meeting
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<blockquote data-quote="Hindsight" data-source="post: 1801180" data-attributes="member: 3169"><p>You did not miss a lot. Date is irrelevant as events will unfold anyway - NFU had to put on a meeting as that is what they do - and so today was as good as any. Anyway to he meeting and my observations - consultant gave a very good overview of world sugar supply which set the scene. As I understood it the general gist is that the closed EU sugar market is now open to world sugar so UK and EU processors and thus growers have to compete - and it will be the lowest price (think milk). We will all decide if the price is good enough - if not then grow something else. Looks as though for time being price in the low 20s is about the mark. Hey ho.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hindsight, post: 1801180, member: 3169"] You did not miss a lot. Date is irrelevant as events will unfold anyway - NFU had to put on a meeting as that is what they do - and so today was as good as any. Anyway to he meeting and my observations - consultant gave a very good overview of world sugar supply which set the scene. As I understood it the general gist is that the closed EU sugar market is now open to world sugar so UK and EU processors and thus growers have to compete - and it will be the lowest price (think milk). We will all decide if the price is good enough - if not then grow something else. Looks as though for time being price in the low 20s is about the mark. Hey ho. [/QUOTE]
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British Sugar life after quotas meeting
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