• Middle East Unrest Heightens Tea Logistics Concerns | Just Ice Tea Raises $14 Million | Wagh Bakri Executive Director Dies Fleeing Stray Dogs

    Middle East Unrest Heightens Tea Logistics Concerns for Transit via the Straits of Hormuz and Suez Canal

    | Just Ice Tea Raises $14 Million to Expand Distribution
    | Wagh Bakri Executive Director Parag Desai, 49, Dies Fleeing Stray Dogs

    Tea News for the week ending Oct. 27
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap

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    Tea Biz traveled to Tanzania last week to explore the tropical Usambara tea-growing region. There, I toured the Sakare Cooperative tea factory and met with smallholder farmers, tea makers, traders, tea sellers, and members of the Tea Board of Tanzania. I recount my adventure beginning today with Tahira Nizari, a savvy business school graduate and humanitarian who co-founded the specialty tea brand Kazi Yetu in 2018 to advance the role of women in Tanzania’s tea industry. Read more

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    Tahira Nizari, co-founder of the Kazi Yetu Tea Collection
    Trouble in the Middle East could force tea to be rerouted.
    Conflict in the Middle East could force tea to be rerouted, greatly increasing costs.

    Middle East Unrest Heightens Tea Logistics Concerns

    By Dan Bolton

    Tea shipping and logistics executives closely monitor Middle East unrest as tea sales to the region declined.

    Immediate concerns involve insurance premiums and pricing risk, but if Iran-backed Hezbollah escalates the Hamas conflict, Israel will likely retaliate against Iran. The Islamic Republic’s navy (IRGCN) has increasingly harassed international vessels, with 20 incidents in the past few years, including the seizing of tankers in the Strait of Hormuz (which spans Oman and Iran), a route traveled by 30% of the world’s oil and much of the world’s tea.

    Due to the violent and volatile Hamas-Israeli conflict, sales of orthodox tea at India’s Kochi Auction declined to 70% of the 2 million kilos on offer. Though Israel buys negligible quantities, exports to other destinations through the Suez Canal will be hit, according to a report in the Hindu BusinessLine.

    See: Middle East Conflict Threatens Global Growth (NYT)

    Traders who spoke to the newspaper cautioned, “Shipments to destinations through the Suez Canal are likely to be hit on account of the war.”

    They anticipate a further decline in demand and disruptions in tea procurement if the situation worsens.

    Iran is the center of attention. 

    Normally a discerning trading partner with a preference for orthodox black tea, imports to Iran spiked last year, yet “At the moment, there are signs that Iran does not have enough teas to last through the winter season,” writes one trader. 

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  • India Tea Board Weighs Auditor Concerns | Overindulgence and High ABV Tea | Tea Stalwart: India’s Oldest Captive Elephant Dies

    Tea Board Weighs Auditor Concerns: Additional Resources Needed to Market Tea

    | Overindulgence and High ABV Tea
    | Tea Stalwart: India’s Oldest Captive Elephant Dies

    Tea News for the week ending Aug 25
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap

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    Tea is intricately woven into India’s cultural tapestry. In its latest marketing campaign, Tata Tea Premium acknowledges and elevates several of the Indian state’s distinctive patterns in fabric and symbols of pride, drawing attention to the tea company’s extensive range of hyperlocal blends. Tata tells the story of extraordinary weavers by digitally enhancing their homespun artistry in an interactive tribute to handlooms. Aravinda Anantharaman reports on this eye-catching effort.

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    Tata’s latest TV for its premium line of tea features a celebrated singer at the heart of great campaigns that evoke nationalistic pride and emotion, which ties in with what Chai means to people across the country.
    NEWS131-G20 Delegates Tea Board India pavilion Experience Zone
    G20 Delegates visit the Tea Board India Pavilion Experience Zone on Aug. 25.

    Limited Resources Restrain Marketing Efforts by Tea Board

    By Dan Bolton

    A Parliamentary committee is reviewing concerns raised in a report by India’s auditor general that identified lapses in enforcing tea industry regulations by the Tea Board of India.

    The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) audit, titled “The Role of Tea Board India in the Development of Tea in India,” reviewed board activities during a five-year period ending in fiscal 2022.

    Auditors drew attention to these concerns:·       

    • The board’s inability to curb smuggled tea and tea untraceable to origin used for blending for sale in domestic markets.·       
    • The lack of a “well-defined strategy” to register growers (large and small). In March 2021, 38% of small growers were unregistered.·       
    • Failure to monitor tea processing facilities by conducting timely inspections and laboratory testing.·       
    • Lack of a database to track yield per hectare, labor productivity, new plantings, aging tree stock, and distribution of cultivars.
    • In addition, a mandate to auction 50% of the country’s tea was not enforced. Auditors found that most registered buyers did not purchase tea at auction.
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  • India Audit Cites Tea Board’s Regulatory Shortfalls | China Tea Exports Decline

    India Audit Cites Regulatory Shortfalls of Tea Board: More than a third of tea smallholders were not registered by March 2021

    | China Tea Exports Decline | China Travel Restrictions Ease
    | Kenya Tea Production is Up, Exports are Down

    Tea News for the week ending Aug 18
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap

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    UKTA Director Jennifer Wood and Jo Selman-Smith, a project manager with the UK Tea Academy who, in 2022, oversaw the launch of The Leafies, join Tea Biz this week to discuss the academy’s international judging of tea in 12 categories with correspondent Dananjaya Silva. This year’s competition is open not only to farmers and suppliers but also to tea retailers worldwide. The deadline for entries to arrive in Scotland is Sept 18.

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    UK Tea Academy’s Jennifer Wood and Jo Selman-Smith with Dananjaya Silva
    CAG Audit India Tea Board
    Cover of 176-page Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General on the Role of the Tea Board in the Development of Tea in India

    Auditors Find Lapse in Factory Inspections, Unregistered Smallholders, Lack of Well-Defined Strategy

    By Dan Bolton

    A government audit of India’s Tea Board during the five years ending 2021 found numerous flaws in its regulatory mandate and a failure to address concerns raised a decade ago. Glaring omissions include the lack of a strategy to identify and register smallholders — a first step in supporting the tea industry’s financial well-being, development, productivity, and promotion in domestic and overseas markets. Small tea growers supply more than half of the tea grown in India.

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  • CVC May Sell Kericho Tea Estates | Dunkin’ Launches Hard Iced Tea and Coffee

    CVC Capital Partners may sell Kenyan tea estates purchased from Unilever in July 2022
    CVC Capital Partners may sell Kenyan tea estates purchased from Unilever in July 2022

    CVC Capital Partners Exploring Sale of Kericho Tea Gardens: Unilever Brands Not for Sale


    | Dunkin’ Will Soon Begin Selling Hard Tea at Select US Grocery and Packaged Liquor Locations in 12 States
    | A Study Using UK Biobank Data Shows Tea May Lower the Risk of Gout

    Tea News for the week ending Aug 11
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap

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    Phil Rushworth, one of the owners of Ottawa-based ZhenTea, loves adventure camping, canoeing, climbing, and hiking. This week, he describes teas and techniques to help tea lovers enjoy special moments in the great outdoors.

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    Phil Rushworth, co-founder of ZhenTea, Ottawa, Canada

    Turmoil Makes Kericho Tea Estates a Highly Visible Liability for Investors

    By Dan Bolton

    The private equity group that paid 4.5 billion Euros for Unilever’s tea business in July 2022 is discussing the sale of the Kenyan gardens and factories supplying its popular tea brands, including Lipton Tea and Infusions, according to the Financial Times,

    The newspaper reports three sources with detailed knowledge of the CVC Capital Partners’ plans.”The Kericho plantation has a history of violence and sexual abuse allegations. Protests in recent months led to the death of one tea worker, torching several tea harvesting machines, theft of tea, and acts of vandalism.

    A Lipton spokesperson quoted in the news report said the company had received a number of unsolicited inbound expressions of interest in our estates and would “review this strategic question at the right point in time.”

    The spokesperson said that if CVC sold the plantation, it would retain the rest of the business, which processes and markets tea under several brands, including PG Tips, Brooke Bond, and Pukka Herbs.

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  • JDE Peet’s Will Withdraw Global Tea and Coffee Brands from Russian Market

    Dr. Roshan Rajadurai
    Hayleys Plantations Managing Director Dr. Roshan Rajadurai addresses the International Plantations Sustainability Summit in Colombo, Sri Lanka
    Tea News for the week ending Aug 4

    | Sustainable Practices are Correlated to Brand Loyalty
    | JDE Peet’s Will Halt Sales of its Best-Known Tea Brands in Russia
    | The UN Global Peace Council Honors WomenServe Founder Nioma Narissa Sadler

    Hear the Headlines
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-minute Tea News Recap

    The recently concluded International Plantations Sustainability Summit hosted by The World of Hayleys in Colombo, Sri Lanka, last week encouraged tea professionals to visualize “Reimagined | Redesigned | Resilient” large-scale tea plantations in Sri Lanka and beyond. Forum attendees, at the invitation of Hayleys Plantations Managing Director, Dr. Roshan Rajadurai, forged new pathways for collaboration and integration of Sustainable Development Goals into modern plantation strategies. 

    Listen to the Interview
    Hayleys Plantations Managing Director Dr. Roshan Rajadurai with Anuruddha Gamage, General Manager of Human Relations & Corporate Sustainability at Kelani Valley Plantations

    Forum Offers Long-term Solutions for Tea Plantations

    By Rasika Galhena | PMD Tea

    Anuruddha Gamage, the General Manager of Human Relations & Corporate Sustainability at Kelani Valley Plantations, spent the past two years identifying ways to integrate the BIO (Biosphere), GEO (Geosphere), SOCIO (Social), and ECONO (Economy) elements of sustainable tea. Participants, drawn from government, academia, NGOs, and research institutes, met in pre-summit workshops to identify the unique, sustainable factors that define the long-term solutions for current challenges. He reports that climate change was top of mind.

    As the architect of the summit, Hayleys Plantations Managing Director Dr. Roshan Rajadurai seized what he called “a unique opportunity to bring together stakeholders to share best practices and drive long-term change.”

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