By Michael Haddon

LONDON--The U.K.'s sugar beet industry is continuing to improve its efficiency and should be as competitive as cane producers across the globe in coming years, domestic lawmakers were told Wednesday, but uncertainty over the future of the European Union's farming subsidies scheme is hampering further investment.

A representative of the National Farmers' Union told the House of Lords committee--part of the U.K. parliament's upper legislative house--that the bloc's current sugar regime should be extended beyond its expiry in 2015 to provide producers and refiners with the policy stability and time to encourage investment in increasing efficiency and to achieve international competitiveness by 2020.

Sugar quotas have long been a staple of EU agriculture policy, with the structure of such regulations hotly debated when the bloc writes its budget every seven years.

"The EU has an opportunity to allow both our industries [producers and refiners] to ready themselves for competition on the global market by allowing us some protection and stability until then," said William Martin, chairman of the NFU's Sugar Board. "We believe there is considerable further increase we can achieve in yield and efficiency."

Chris Carter, corporate affairs director at British Sugar, a unit of Associated British Foods PLC (ABF.LN), said it would be harmful to U.K. interests to abolish the Common Market Organization and negotiations should "proceed with caution."

The CMO of the sugar market encompasses fixed prices, interprofessional agreements, production quotas and market management in an attempt to improve the competitiveness of the sector, ensuring its long-term sustainability. New proposals for the measures are currently being debated in Brussels, with a final decision expected early in 2014.

"If policy arrangements are promptly scrapped this will discourage the further investment needed to make our industry fully competitive by 2020," Mr. Carter said. "We need to know what these arrangements are...before we can make definitive future plans. If we feel we cannot look far ahead enough or the policy environment is uncertain it is going to cause delays in investment--of that there is no doubt," he added.

The lawmakers' inquiry focuses on sugar reform in the bloc through the lense of the Common Agricultural Policy reform package and will feed into discussions in Brussels about the $75 billion-a-year aid measures.

NFU Sugar is the single entity that represents all sugar beet growers in the U.K. and negotiates on their collective behalf with the single processor British Sugar.

Write to Michael Haddon at michael.haddon@dowjones.com

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