• Holiday Shoppers Lose Confidence | Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction in Dar es Salaam | Tea Barter: Egypt Offers Kenya a Blank Check


    Holiday Consumers Lose Confidence Before Black Friday Sales Begin | YouGov Survey of American Shoppers Finds 52% Won’t Shop on Black Friday | Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction in Dar es Salaam | Tea Barter: Cash Short Egypt Offers Kenya a Blank Check

    Tea News for the week ending Nov. 17
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap
    India News Update
    India Update | Aravinda Anantharaman

    Tanzania is the third-largest tea producer in Africa. Smallholders there farm 48% of the country’s 23,800 hectares under tea. Data from the Tea Board of Tanzania (TBT) estimates that 32,000 tea smallholders collectively produce about 40% of the country’s green leaf. As Director General, Theophord C. Ndunguru is the voice of the Tanzania Smallholders Tea Development Agency (TSHTDA). In October, I traveled to Dar es Salaam to talk with Theophord and fellow tea board members to better understand the state of tea smallholders. Today’s report is an excerpt from our discussion.

    Listen to the interview
    Theophord C. Nduguru, Director General Tanzania Smallholders Tea Development Agency

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    Tanzania launches digital tea auction
    Tanzania launched a digital tea auction on Nov. 13 in Dar es Salaam, selling 1,320 packages (66,920 kgs), leaving 58% unsold: 33% dust, 72% secondaries, and 44% of brokers. BP1s were not supported. Dusts were not supported. Colourly D1s were all absorbed at lower rates.

    Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction

    By Dan Bolton

    Tanzania conducted the inaugural Dar es Salaam digital tea auction this week, fulfilling a government mandate to stop exporting locally grown tea through the Kenyan port of Mombasa.

    Four gardens sold a combined 1,320 packages (66,920 kgs), leaving 58% of tea unsold. Marks on offer include Arc Mountain, Chivanjee, Diddira, Kwamkoro, Kibena, Ikanga, and Itona.

    Download Auction Report

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  • Holiday Shoppers Lose Confidence | Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction in Dar es Salaam | Tea Barter: Egypt Offers Kenya a Blank Check

    Holiday Consumers Lose Confidence Before Black Friday Sales Begin | YouGov Survey of American Shoppers Finds 52% Won’t Shop on Black Friday | Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction in Dar es Salaam | Tea Barter: Cash Short Egypt Offers Kenya a Blank Check

    Tea News for the week ending Nov. 17
    Hear the Headlines | Seven-Minute Tea News Recap

    Tanzania is the third-largest tea producer in Africa. Smallholders there farm 48% of the country’s 23,800 hectares under tea. Data from the Tea Board of Tanzania (TBT) estimates that 32,000 tea smallholders collectively produce about 40% of the country’s green leaf. As Director General, Theophord C. Ndunguru is the voice of the Tanzania Smallholders Tea Development Agency (TSHTDA). In October, I traveled to Dar es Salaam to talk with Theophord and fellow tea board members to better understand the state of tea smallholders. Today’s report is an excerpt from our discussion.

    Listen to the interview
    Theophord C. Nduguru, Director General Tanzania Smallholders Tea Development Agency
    India News Update
    India Update | Aravinda Anantharaman

    Powered by RedCircle

    Tanzania launches digital tea auction
    Tanzania launched a digital tea auction on Nov. 13 in Dar es Salaam, selling 1,320 packages (66,920 kgs) with one-third of dust, 72% of secondaries, and 44% of brokers unsold.

    Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction

    By Dan Bolton

    Tanzania conducted the inaugural Dar es Salaam digital tea auction this week, fulfilling a government mandate to stop exporting locally grown tea through the Kenyan port of Mombasa.

    Four gardens sold a combined 1,320 packages (66,920 kgs), leaving 58% of tea unsold. Marks on offer include Arc Mountain, Chivanjee, Diddira, Kwamkoro, Kibena, Ikanga, and Itona.

    Download Auction Report

    The East Africa Tea Trade Association (EATTA), which runs the Mombasa tea auction, said the competing auction did not impact prices at its twice-weekly sales. The East African reported Mombasa could lose 25% of its current volume if Dar es Salaam meets its goal of selling 65,000 metric tons weekly. Mombasa is the world’s largest tea auction by volume and, in 1992, became the first tea auction outside London to sell teas from multiple origins. Sales of teas from ten countries are offered year-round. The auction handled as much as 545 million kilos before the pandemic, but volume fell to 482 million kilograms of tea in 2022.

    Tea Board of Tanzania (TBT) Director General Mary Kipeja said the Dar es Salaam auction will lower costs, increase transparency, and make Tanzania a regional hub providing services to tea-growing countries in East Africa. Agriculture Ministry Permanent Secretary Gerald Mweli attended the auction, which drew the praise of President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

    The auction and related infrastructure improvements are part of the national 10-Year Industry Strategy adopted by Parliament. The program calls for increasing tea production from 33,000 tons of made tea to 90,000 tons annually by fiscal 2029/30.

    Players in the value chain will benefit, including buyers, brokers, warehouse operators, and transporters, and the port facilities at Tanga and Dar es Salaam, said Kipeja. “More Tanzanians will also be enticed with interests in tea cultivation and management, increasing production and quality of the produce,” she said.

    Sales of Tanzanian tea for export currently generate an average of $60 million in foreign exchange revenue. Direct employment is 50,000 and rising.

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    Episode 143 | Holiday Consumers Lose Confidence Before Black Friday Sales Begin | YouGov Survey of American Shoppers Finds 52% Won’t Shop on Black Friday | Tanzania Debuts Digital Tea Auction in Dar es Salaam | Tea Barter: Cash Short Egypt Offers Kenya a Blank Check | PLUS Tanzania is the third-largest tea producer in Africa. Smallholders there farm 48% of the country’s 23,800 hectares and collectively produce about 40% of the country’s green leaf. As Director General, Theophord C. Ndunguru is the voice of the Tanzania Smallholders Tea Development Agency. In October, I traveled to Dar es Salaam to talk with Theophord and fellow tea board members to better understand the state of tea smallholders. Today’s report is an excerpt from our discussion.

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  • India Update: Tea Export Markets Expand | New Association of Tea Auctioneers | Assam Folk Tea Festival Nov. 24-26

    By Aravinda Anantharaman | Managing Editor

    India Tea News for the week ending Nov. 17
    India Update | Aravinda Anantharaman
    Indian Tea Exports
    Indian tea export destinations have expanded to include Iraq, Jordan, and Turkey.

    Export Markets Expand

    Even as the industry reports a nearly 10% decrease in tea exports this year, brought about by the loss of the Iran market, the war in West Asia, and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, there has been good news. India now sees three new markets in Iraq, Jordan, and Turkey, replacing their traditional source, Sri Lanka. The work to develop these markets has been ongoing for a while. In 2021, the Baghdad Chamber of Commerce invited India to participate in the country’s first-ever tea festival. In 2022, Indian tea exports to Turkey were valued at $7.36 million, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. As for Jordan, over the past four years, there has been substantial growth in Jordan’s exports to India, especially with phosphates and potash, while imports from India include coffee, tea, spices, sugar, grains, meat, and fish.


    New Association of Auctioneers

    Auctioneers across India have decided to collectivize as the Association of Tea Auctioneers. With 40% of the Indian tea production sold via auctions, it seems that auctioneers felt the need to unite to promote and safeguard their rights and interests. Thirteen auctioneers have come forward to form the ATA, launched on November 10th with a ceremonial manual auction at the famed Nilhat House in Kolkata. 795 lots of orthodox Assam tea was on offer with Gaurav Ghosh, Vice Chairman of J Thomas and Co., as the auctioneer for the day. Buyers were almost all exporters, and the auction took place over 6 hours. Bringing back the manual auction for a day was also to celebrate how auctions used to take place before the industry transitioned to e-auctions. The ATA has proposed to design and operate a new auction system if the government approves. 


    Folk Tea Festival

    Journalist Mrinal Talukdar is set to host the 3rd Folk Tea Festival in Assam this month. Spread over three days, the festival takes place at the Hatipoti Tea Estate near North Bank, Assam. It’s organized in a small tea garden and is a festival promoting folk music, local culture, and tea. This year, the festival is scheduled for November 24th to 26th. Those interested can book via the website Folktea.In where the schedule, accommodation options, and events are listed.

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