Showing posts with label Industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Industry. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Kenya: Shield Tea Industry From Climate Change

 

Fredrick Gori

21 June 2011

opinion


Nairobi — The tea industry is a big deal for Kenya. In 2010, it continued as the country's top foreign exchange earner, bringing in nearly Sh100 billion.


Conservative estimates show that the industry employs more than four million people across the value chain, and contributes nearly four per cent to the GDP.


In the last two years, small-scale tea farmers were among the best paid in the world, thanks to high product quality, good auction prices and favourable currency exchange rates.


The tea industry's contribution to the economy could rise further considering there is plenty of room for improvement.


Small-scale farmers, numbering more than half a million and concentrated mainly in the highlands account for 62 per cent of the production. Their individual holdings are small, averaging just under 0.5 acres.


But despite this, small-scale tea farmers continue to produce top quality teas that remain popular with consumers around the world.


But they can double their output by adhering to good practices such as regular plucking rounds, pruning whenever necessary and fertiliser application.


However, with continued sub-division of land under tea, deliberate steps must be taken to stop tea farming becoming economically unviable.


Given the entrenched tradition of sub-dividing land to successive generations, there is real concern that farmers may opt out of tea farming when it stops making business sense to them.


This situation can be averted, first by helping farmers to treat tea farming as a business with profit and loss accounts.


This would require them to consolidate their holdings and form limited companies to manage the business with individuals becoming shareholders.


Secondly, the government needs to come up with specific policies to guide sub-division of land in the entire agricultural sector.


Tea farmers with economically unviable units are likely to be the hardest hit by climate change because they lack the resources to adapt.


Already, we are seeing erratic rainfall patterns in virtually all tea-growing areas leading to lower green leaf production.


The possibility that farmers may be required to resort to irrigation could drive thousands out of business simply because this is an expensive venture.


Some experts also warn that the flavour, for which our teas are well-known, may be compromised by climate change, although there is no conclusive evidence of that.


The net effect of climate change for small-holders in most instances will be increased poverty and disease prevalence, as well as reduced revenues.


To save the tea industry from this threat and secure the future of tea farmers, we must invest in both mitigation and adaptation measures.


A key mitigation measure is to increase the greenhouse gas sinks by saving forests from destruction and planting trees to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.


Farmers can also be helped to switch to cleaner sources of energy such as solar and wind to reduce forest destruction.


Most adaptation measures are designed only to prevent further warming, not reverse existing warming, hence adaptation, which involves acting to tolerate the effects of global warming.


Clearly, Kenyans have a lot to do to prepare adequately for the inevitable.


Mr Gori is a public relations specialist based in Nairobi.




More News on allAfrica.com

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Japan’s Tea Industry Facing Shortage as Nuclear Radiation Taints Shipments

 Japan may face a shortage of green tea as radiation leaking from the crippled Fukushima Dai-Ichi power station tainted leaves, spurring the government to restrict shipments from four prefectures. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg


Japan may face a shortage of green tea as radiation leaking from the crippled Fukushima Dai-Ichi power station tainted leaves, spurring the government to restrict shipments from four prefectures.


The government decided yesterday to curb shipments of dried tea leaves containing more than 500 becquerel per kilogram of radioactive cesium and ordered a halt in shipments from the eastern prefectures of Ibaraki, Chiba, Kanagawa and Tochigi where tainted produce was detected. Japan’s tea production, including fresh and dried leaves, was worth 102.1 billion yen ($1.3 billion) in 2009, according to the agriculture ministry.


The decision came after Shizuoka prefecture, Japan’s largest growing region representing about 40 percent of total output, declared its green tea was safe. Governor Heita Kawakatsu said last month tests on fresh leaves and drinks showed they contained cesium amounts well below the government levels. Still, cesium levels in dried leaves could be about five times higher than fresh leaves, said Yasuo Sasaki, senior press counselor at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.


“The new regulation may spur shipment restrictions from Shizuoka prefecture, slashing supplies and boosting prices of green teas,” Sasaki said today in a telephone interview. “Higher prices could spur consumers to shift from green tea to cheaper alternatives such as barley tea or oolong tea.”


The government also asked each prefectural governor to test dried tea leaves for radioactive contamination.


Shizuoka prefecture, west of Tokyo, produced 33,400 metric tons of dried green tea in the year ended March 31, accounting for 39.3 percent of the nation’s total production. The southern prefecture of Kagoshima is the second-largest grower, producing 24,600 tons, according to the ministry.


One of the test results showed fresh tea leaves from Izu city in the prefecture contained 98 becquerel of cesium per kilogram, according to the Shizuoka website.


The government made the decision because green tea is also processed into seasoning for various food products including cookies and ice cream, said Taku Ohara at the inspection and safety division of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare.


“As dried tea leaves could be consumed directly by humans, we need to test them and ban sales of tainted products,” he said today by phone.


“We have not tested dried tea leaves as they are used in the middle of tea processing and are not a finished product. We have tested fresh tea leaves and tea drinks,” said Toshiyuki Aoki, assistant director at the office of tea and agricultural production at the Shizuoka prefectural government. “We would like to decide how to respond through discussion with government officials.”


Drink makers such as Ito En Ltd. (2593) purchase Japanese green tea as a raw material. The company’s shares lost 2.6 percent to 1,370 yen today on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.


Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the crippled nuclear plant, aims to meet a deadline to stabilize reactors at the station within six to nine months, Junichi Matsumoto, an official for the power utility, said on May 30.


To contact the reporter on this story: Aya Takada in Tokyo at atakada2@bloomberg.net.


To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net.


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Monday, June 13, 2011

Research and Markets: Research Report on China's Tea Industry 2011-2012 - The Biggest Tea Producing Country in the World

Press Release Source: Research and Markets On Thursday June 2, 2011, 6:28 am EDT

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/82df75/research_report_on) has announced the addition of the "Research Report on China's Tea Industry 2011-2012" report to their offering.

Chinese people have the habit of tea drinking. Tea drinking and tea planting in various countries in the world are spread from China directly or indirectly. In 729 AD, tea drinking spread to Japan first. In 1610, Dutch traders bought tea from China, which was transferred to various European countries afterwards. Subsequently, tea became a kind of worldwide drinks. China's tea planting technology was first transmitted to Japan. In 1780, East India Company in India imported tea seeds from Guangdong to India. Nowadays, there are over 50 countries planting and producing tea worldwide.

In 2010, the total output of tea in China exceeded 1.40 million tons, ranking the first in the world.

In 2010, China's domestic market consumed about 1.10 million tons of tea. In China, in addition to traditional tea, deep processed products with high technology content have become new favorites of the market. Tea drinks, tea food and instant tea have met people's requirement for increasingly accelerating life pace. Tea polyphenol, theanine, tea pigment and other tea extract products have become health care products chosen by many people.

Statistics show that China's tea deep processing field adopts raw material occupying 6% of China's total tea output, but creates the market of CNY 30 billion, accounting for one third of the market scale of China's tea industry.

Despite many unfavorable factors such as appreciation of RMB and increase in costs of production goods and labor, in 2010, China's tea export volume still exceeded 300,000 tons, ranking the second in the world, and the tea export value hit the record high, reaching USD 784 million.

Seen by categories, in 2010, the export of green tea, scented tea and Pu'er tea increased while that of oolong tea and black tea decreased. Seen by markets, the export to the U.S.A. and Russia increased rapidly. However, influenced by shortage in raw material supply, increase in production costs, quality standardization, etc., the export to West Africa and other traditional markets experienced a decline.

Despite the large number of China's tea enterprises, there's a lack of leading enterprises and global well-known brands in international tea industry in a real sense, and standardized and normalized tea production chain has not been formed. At present, China's exported tea is still mostly raw material products, and the competition is mainly low-level price competition. In 2010, China's average tea export price was less than 2.70 USD/kg, lower than that of Sri Lanka, Kenya and other countries.

Key Topics Covered:

1 Related Concepts of Tea Industry

2 Overview of Major Tea Producing Countries in the World, 2010

3 Analysis on China's Tea Industry, 2010

4 Analysis on China's Major Tea Producing Regions, 2010-2011

5 China's Major Tea Processing Enterprises, 2010-2011

6 Prediction on Development of China's Tea Industry, 2011-2012

Companies Mentioned:

China Tea Co., Ltd. Yunnan Landsuntea Green Industry Co., Ltd. Wuyistar Tea Industrial Co., Ltd. Longrun Group Tenfu Group Yunnan Dianhong Group Co., Ltd. Anxi Tiekuanyin Group Hunan Tea Industry (Group) Co., Ltd. Shenzhen Shenbao Industrial Co., Ltd. Zhejiang Tea Group Co., Ltd

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/82df75/research_report_on


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