Brazilian sugar cane mills are increasing purchases of machinery in an effort to improve efficiency in the field as the robust demand outlook for the sweetener encourages companies to boost investments. Makers of cane harvesters such as John Deere and AGCO are ramping up production in Brazil as deliveries rise, finally seeing past investments in local manufacturing lines beginning to pay off, said executives.
Brazilian sugar producers are entering the final stages of the 2016/17 crop as futures prices for raw sugar hit a four-year peak in New York, supported by forecasts for at least a two-year global supply deficit in the commodity. Brazil's center south is expected to harvest a near record crop for the second year in a row, taking advantage of an excellent market while other sugar producing countries such as India and Thailand reap smaller crops due to poor weather.
"Some mills are rushing to buy harvesters and other equipment, because they want to be sure they will be able to process all available cane," said Marco Gobesso, head of marketing for cane machines at American equipment maker AGCO. AGCO's Ribeir?o Preto plant, in the heart of Brazil's cane belt, is producing double the number of harvesters this year compared to 2015 and has room to do more.
The company invested around 100 million reais ($30.5 million) in the plant after buying a local producer in 2012. But it is still working at only 40 percent of the capacity, after a long cycle of low sugar and ethanol prices that ended in 2014 sharply reduced investments in the sector and sent dozens of mills into bankruptcy. Grupo Moreno, a family-owned sugar company in the Ribeiro Preto region, is an example of the recent equipment-buying move. The company bought 15 harvesters this year at around a million reais ($300,000) each. It bought none last year and only two harvesters in 2014.
"We had machines that were very old and would breakdown in the field a lot, delaying our crushing plans and increasing costs," said Eduardo Bellucci, head of harvesting operations at the company that owns three mills and expects to crush 11 million tonnes of cane this year. Grupo Moreno still has several machines that are at least 11 years old, when he got orders to start replacing machines with over 6 years in use.
Marco Ripoli, head of marketing for cane equipment at John Deere, said the company is looking to expand production at its plant in Catalao, Goias, by 30 percent after releasing a new generation of harvesters that promise to collect more cane quicker and using less diesel. "There are around 9,000 old harvesters operating in Brazil. They need to be replaced," he said. Ripoli said mills are prioritizing investments in equipment that will lead to improved operations, before they think of building new mills or expanding planted area. "The focus today is to optimize existing structures. Increasing capacity is still a medium-term possibility," he said. Only three companies produce full-sized cane harvesters in Brazil. The Dutch company Case New Holland is the third group.