According to All India Tea Traders Association and Gujarat Tea Traders Association, prices have shot up due to a fall in production and inventory levels, along with healthy demand for tea
The production in north India, comprising Assam and north Bengal, is down by 40 per cent from January to June as compared to the figures of 2019
The report also said that as tea is a fixed cost-intensive industry, a decline in the crop will substantially increase the cost of production for the NI bulk tea industry
Indian tea growers should focus more on orthodox tea manufacturing which has a good export market
Tea estates in Assam and West Bengal, after closure for three weeks during lockdown, resumed operations from April, 12, 2020 with partial manpower utilisation
Usually, during May-July, tea companies need a higher cash flow to ready the bushes for the second flush. This harvest is the most important in Assam and the second-most important in West Bengal
While there has been practically no income due to lockdown, fixed costs such as wages and loan servicing have been mounting
All of the 1422 registered tea estates and more than 250,000 micro-small planters have stopped production citing safety precautions for workers, unavailability of transport
Exports of whole-leaf tea to Iran increased by around 74 per cent at 53.45 mkg while in Germany, it stagnated at 10 mkg
ITA secretary general Arijit Raha said steps are being taken to ensure that tea garden workers avail central welfare schemes
"We have asked the Tea Board to see if we can grow palm in our estates and manufacture palm oil. We need a big area for this", Vivek Goenka, chairman of the ITA, said
Average consumption was the highest in Gujarat at 1,385 gram (g) a year per person
Exports to neighbouring Pakistan, China and Iran went up significantly while the shipments to Germany and CIS countries were down
Brokers favour all the produce to be routed through open auction channels