It's the End of a Sugary Era in Hawaii

Last cane haul on Maui happened on Monday
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 13, 2016 12:08 AM CST
Updated Dec 13, 2016 2:00 AM CST
Hawaii Brings in Final Sugar Harvest
A worker cuts sugar cane at Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar, Hawaii's last sugar plantation in Puunene, Hawaii.   (Audrey McAvoy)

The only remaining sugar mill in Hawaii is ending its final harvest. The last cane haul at Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company on Maui happened on Monday, with hundreds of workers and retirees on hand to watch the last delivery, Hawaii News Now reports. Parent company Alexander & Baldwin announced in January that it would phase out sugar production this year. "Hawaii produced over a million tons of sugar per year for over 50 years. At one time that was 20% of all the sugar that was consumed in the United States," says Robert Osgood, a retired consultant for the Hawaii Agriculture Research Center and co-author of From King Cane to the Last Sugar Mill.

Sugar farms in Hawaii have closed or consolidated, and competition has increased worldwide, the AP reports. Alexander & Baldwin reported an operating loss of about $30 million in agribusiness in 2015. The company also faced battles over water rights and the public health effects of burning cane leaves. Many workers at the sugar plantation aren't sure what they will do next. About half of the 650 employees have already been laid off, and more than 140 have found other jobs, according to the company. A transition team is helping the workers adjust. Robin Fernandez and Ricky Watimar said their great-grandfather came to Hawaii from Portugal and six generations of their family ended up working in the sugar industry. "You won't see sugar anymore, and sugar was all we know," Fernandez says. (More Hawaii stories.)

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