Tea growers set for party as prices soar
The tea industry in Sri Lanka, the world's second biggest exporter of
the crop, is looking forward to good times again as prices soar on a
global commodities boom.
Mounting productions costs and growing demand are combining to
reverse a three-decade old trend toward lower prices, according to
industry officials, and that means drinkers will likely have to pay more
for their brew.
Dilhan Fernando, director of Dilmah Tea which sells more than 500
million dollars of tea in over 90 countries, expects strong prices to
halt the long slide in tea prices and boost earnings for producers. "We
have never had it so good. The climate has changed and we are seeing
consumers willing to pay more for their teas," he told AFP.
Sri Lanka earned a record 1.03 billion dollars in 2007 selling the
commodity overseas and expects to earn more this year.
"Tea will be a bull market in 2008," said Kaison Chang, of the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
"The fundamentals have changed and consumers are likely to see price
rises." Tea, which is not indigenous to the island but was introduced by
a Scotsman named James Taylor who planted it in 1849, is Sri Lanka's
number one export commodity.
"A pack of 100 tea bags now retails at five dollars, about 15 percent
more than last year," said Fernando.
"In some markets our fancy teas are selling 40 per cent more than a
year ago, which is good because tea prices in packed form usually move
up by between two to three percent a year," Fernando said.
Sri Lanka's high quality aromatic teas, sold as "Pure Ceylon Tea" are
made with tender leafs and buds of the plant botanically known as
Camellia Sinenis.
Ceylon is the former name of Sri Lanka. Russia and former Soviet
republics are the largest markets for Sri Lankan tea and account for
nearly a fifth of the total tea exports, followed by the Middle East and
North Africa.
Brokers said growing disposable incomes in oil exporting countries,
where tea is part of the basic food basket for many families, would also
lift local demand this year.
"These markets are likely to enjoy relative economic stability as oil
prices would remain strong in a year that economists forecast
recession," said Anil Cooke, senior vice president of Asia Siyaka
Commodities.
"Liberalisation of tea markets such as Iran, Libya and Iraq will add
to demand," said Cooke.
In December, with concerns mounting already over a possible shortfall
in supplies and Chinese consumption surpassing India for the first time,
political violence in Kenya's tea-rich Rift Valley region triggered a
price spike.
African tea prices have climbed more than eight percent to about 2.50
dollars a kilogram (1.14 dollars a pound) in Kenya last month, the
highest in more than two years. Colombo, which conducts the world's
biggest weekly tea auction, sold tea for about 3.15 dollars a kilogramme,
brokers said. "Auction prices are not falling.
That combined with higher transport, packaging and labour costs, will
push up prices of Ceylon tea in packaged form," said Niraj de Mel of Van
Rees, a Dutch bulk tea buyer.
With global levels of production and consumption converging at about
3.6 million tonnes a year, the FAO said any hint of bad weather, further
political violence in a leading supplier or a bigger thirst for tea will
lift prices.
And the rise for a cup of tea comes as the prices of other
traditional brews such as cocoa and coffee have also risen.
AFP |