Minnesota
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CONSUMER BENEFITS:
TAXPAYER BENEFITS: The U.S. sugar program is designed and intended to operate at no cost to American taxpayers JOBS: 32,509 jobs* in Minnesota are a portion of the 372,228 jobs nationwide that rely on a strong U.S. sweetener industry. ECONOMIC IMPACT: $1,717,300,000 of economic activity is generated in Minnesota each year by the U.S. sugar and corn sweetener industries*. As part of the national sweetener industry, Minnesota is one of the 42 states that help create $21.1 billion in economic activity SUGARBEET INDUSTRY: Minnesota is the largest beet-producing region in the United States. Over 1,600 growers produce 9.8 million tons of beets on 400,000 acres. There are five sugarbeet processing facilities--Crookston, East Grand Forks, Drayton (ND), Hillsboro and Moorhead--owned by American Crystal Sugar Co., a farmer cooperative; Renville, owned by the Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Cooperative, and in Wahpeton, ND by the Minn-Dak Farmers Cooperative. CORN SWEETENER INDUSTRY: $129,400,000 is added to the value of the Minnesota corn crop as a result of the corn refining industry*. The added demand for corn benefits each of the 32,411 farms that raise 6.6 million acres of corn in Minnesota. About 760,000,000 bushels of corn nationwide each year are used for making sweetener. This represents over 8 percent of the U.S. corn crop. EFFICIENT PRODUCERS: More than 100 countries produce sugar and American producers are among the most efficient. More than half of the world's sugar is produced at a higher cost than in the U.S. A MAJOR IMPORTER: The U.S. is the fourth largest net importer of sugar in the world. The WTO and NAFTA trade agreements require the U.S. to import sugar from 41 countries, about 15 percent of our market, whether we need the foreign sugar or not. RESPONDING TO PREDATORY FOREIGN TRADE PRACTICES: Virtually every sugar exporting country dumps its surplus onto the world market at prices below any country's cost of production. Until these unfair foreign trade practices are addressed we must maintain a domestic sugar policy that responds to these predatory practices. U.S. SWEETENER POLICY BENEFITS AMERICA* SOURCES: American Sugarbeet Growers, 2009. "RETAIL PRICES OF SUGAR AROUND THE WORLD IN 2002," LMC INTERNATIONAL LTD., February 2003. "THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SUGAR AND CORN SWEETENER INDUSTRY TO THE U.S. ECONOMY," USDA |
Audio & Video
Factors Driving the Sugar Market: Jack Roney of the American Sugar Alliance on the commodity's banner year last year and where prices are headed.
American Crystal Sugar Company is a world-class agricultural cooperative specializing in the production of sugar and related agri-products.


