Tea pickers at Nandi Tea Estate Limited in Nandi Hills: Kenya earned
Sh202 million in the year to June compared to Sh231 realised in the
previous financial year. FILE PHOTO | JARED NYATAYA | NATION MEDIA
GROUP
The value of
specialty tea sold to the international market from Kenya dropped 12 per
cent after a slump in the economies of major buying countries following
low oil prices.
Statistics from the Kenya Tea
Development Agency (KTDA) indicate Kenya earned Sh202 million in the
year to June compared to Sh231 realised in the previous financial year.
General
manager for marketing John Bett says there was low demand of tea from
Iran, Russia and Kazakhstan which are major buyers of the orthodox tea.
Mr
Bett also attributed the decline on Kenya’s fixed price on this type of
tea, which is higher than in countries such as Sri-Lanka where the
commodity is traded at the auction, making the price a bit lower.
A kilogramme of tea in Sri-Lanka fetches Sh347 compared with Sh474 that it sells at in Kenya.
“Devaluation
of currencies resulting from economic slump due to low oil prices in
our major markets led to the decline in value of the orthodox tea in the
just ended financial year,” said Mr Bett.
Oil prices
have been falling since 2014 where it traded at a high of $114 per
barrel to the current lows of $47, affecting the countries whose budgets
are solely dependent on oil.
The KTDA is banking on orthodox tea to grow its earnings as it seeks to cut reliance on black CTC tea Kenya is renowned for.
Mr
Bett said though production of this type of tea is still low, it has a
promising future for the earnings of the company and the farmers.
For
instance, a kilogramme of black CTC tea sells at an average of Sh300
while the same quantity of orthodox tea attracts more than Sh400.
The tea agency has installed specialty tea processing equipment in Kangaita in Embu, Itumbe in Kisii and Meru.
Additional lines to process the orthodox tea will be rolled out in all the 12 tea zones by the end of next year.
The three factories have a combined production capacity of 2.1 million kilogrammes.
Last
year, they produced 427,000 kilogrammes of orthodox tea — a decline
from the previous year when output stood at 600,000 kilogrammes.
Mr Bett expressed optimism that the volumes would grow this year, which started on a better note compared to 2014/2015.
Kenya
seeks to reach beyond the traditional markets of Egypt, Sudan, Pakistan
and Afghanistan that are the major buyers of black tea.
Orthodox
tea is made by rolling whole tea leaves into different sizes while the
more common CTC teas are made using the crush, tear, curl process to
produce granular particles.
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