• Singtom Tea Garden Bungalows In Darjeeling Burn | Kangra Tea Promotion Plans Announced | Ratan Tata Passes Away at 86

    By Aravinda Anantharaman | Editor

    India Tea News for the week ending October 18, 2024
    India Tea News | Aravinda Anantharaman

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    Ratan N. Tata

    Singtom Tea Gardens in Darjeeling Burn Down

    On October 9th, the bungalow of the assistant manager of Singtom tea estate burned down. A few days later, on October 13th, the manager’s bungalow caught fire. The workers alerted the police and the fire department, but the bungalows were destroyed. Police say arson has not been ruled out.

    Singtom tea estate has been closed since September 25th following the recent bonus discussions. Unions in Darjeeling have demanded 20%, and as protests intensified, the manager and assistant manager of the Singtom Tea Estate chose to leave without notice about three weeks ago. This was likely done out of fear of the protests escalating. Meanwhile, the dispatch of tea from the gardens has been stopped, and unsold tea is piling up in the hill town. Singtom employs around 680 workers, who have said they have not received any bonus payments. Both sides – the management and workers – are now stuck in limbo, and losses extend to both. As it happened, the bungalows that burned down were part of Singtom’s hospitality offering, which brought additional revenue to the company.


    Kangra Tea Board Seeks To Promote Tea In Airports and Stations

    At the 250th board meeting of the Tea Board India held in Palampur, discussions included promoting Kangra tea. Consequently, there are plans to improve the tea’s visibility in the market. The Tea Board plans to leverage resources from the recently announced Tea Development and Promotion Scheme for campaigns and sustained brand promotion. Plans include airports and railway stations. Incidentally, the East India Company’s tea promotion campaign included the extensive railway network they had built to introduce and promote tea to the Indian market.


    Ratan N. Tata Passes Away

    Indian industrialist and Chairman Emeritus of Tata Sons and the Tata Group, Ratan Naval Tata, passed away on 9th October. He was 86. Under his leadership, the Tata Group became a formidable and profitable business conglomerate with a strong global footprint. The tea industry, in particular, found an ally in Mr Tata. Under his leadership, Tata Tea went from being a tea plantation business to a consumer tea brand, making packaged and branded tea accessible to consumers. In 2005, he decided to exit the plantation business in Munnar, but rather than sell the company, he offered it to employees who continue to be shareholders of the Kanan Devan Hills Plantation Ltd. In the east, Tata Tea was divested from the plantation business in 2007. During Ratan Tata’s leadership, Tata Tea acquired Tetley, a well-established brand valued at nearly four times Tata’s net worth. It was described as “the audacious acquisition of a global shark by an Indian minnow.” At the time, it was the most significant cross-border acquisition of an international brand by an Indian company. His business achievements run long, but beyond that, Tata will be remembered for his humility, love for dogs, and legacy of philanthropy that impacted everything from cancer research to sanitation—a person who made a difference.


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  • Bonus Discussions Continue | Tea Board Announces Funds To Promote Domestic Consumption | Elephant Attack in the Nilgiris Claims Third Life In 3 Months

    By Aravinda Anantharaman | Editor

    India Tea News for the week ending October 11, 2024
    India Tea News | Aravinda Anantharaman

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    Kurseong Hill Station, Darjeeling
    Kurseong Hill Station, Darjeeling

    Bonus Updates For North India

    Last week, Darjeeling’s tea garden employees went on a 12-hour strike demanding a 20% bonus and refusing to accept the 13% offered. The Statesman reported that after the fifth round of tripartite talks on the bonus issue ended without consensus, the state government had to intervene. They have issued an advisory to the management asking them to pay 16% as a bonus adding that the tea gardens facing financial difficulties can negotiate the bonus percentage through discussions with unions. The advisory covers Darjeeling, Kurseong, and Kalimpong Hills tea garden workers. Bonuses were to be disbursed by 4 October, given that the country celebrates the Dusshera festival this week, an important festival in Bengal. However, trade unions have not been happy with the 16%, and the state labor department has informed them that another round of talks would be held in Kolkata on November 6.


    Tea Board Announces Tea Development & Promotion Scheme

    The Tea Board, under the aegis of the Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Government of India, announced the Tea Development & Promotion Scheme that comes with a budget of Rs
    664.09 crore or USD 79 million. The scheme will extend from 2023 to 2025 and broadly covers Plantation Development & Quality Upgradation, Tea Promotion and Market Support, Technological Intervention, Research and Development, and Welfare & Capacity Building measures. It addresses several immediate concerns, such as replanting, proper pruning, adherence to quality plucking, soil health, product development and diversification, and value addition. There seems to be a heavy emphasis on branding and promotion. These schemes are open to registered stakeholders from within the industry on the 15th of this month.


    Elephant Attack Claims Another Life In The Nilgiris

    A 34-year-old man in Kengarai in the Nilgiris was walking through a tea estate when a wild elephant attacked him. He was found seriously injured and rushed to the hospital but succumbed to his injuries. This is the third casualty in Kengarai in two months. The villagers staged a protest, calling for the government to do something to prevent more deaths. While man-elephant conflict is prevalent around the country, all the tea regions struggle with this problem.


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