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Indian tea prices look firm in 2010

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Ishita Ayan DuttDilip Kumar Jha Kolkata/ Mumbai
Last Updated : Jan 20 2013 | 12:26 AM IST

Global Tea prices are likely to ease next year on higher estimated output as weather patterns returned to normal in the main tea-producing regions of Asia and Africa, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of United Nation said in its latest report. Global tea prices hit the roof in 2009 due to global production shortage. However, Indian tea producers are not buying the FAO forecast.

Aaccording to them India may drive tea prices up as the current year's 65 million kg shortage is not going to be made up for so easily. Add to it, a year-on-year consumption growth of about 30 million kg in India, and it appears that prices are likely to remain strong.

Aditya Khaitan, managing director McLeod Russel (India), said, Prices would remain strong in the next year. The shortage in the system will not be made up for, even if the crop is very good. McLeod Russel happens to be the world's largest bulk tea producer with a production of 96 million kg.

Karan Paul, chairman Apeejay Surrendra group, was confident of the India story and said that it would impact global prices going forward. Apeejay Surrendra has one of the bigger plantation portfolios with a production of about 25 million kg.

The FAO Tea Composite price, the indicative world price for black tea, reached a high of $3.18 a kilogramme in September amid droughts in India, Sri Lanka and Kenya underpinned by increased demand, compared to an average price of $2.38 per kilogram in 2008.The concern that FAO is raising is that tea producers could over-react to the current high prices by planting more crops. Industry sources said, the global shortage with pipeline deficit was at 165 million kg now.

"The new year will be very good. Even if prices holds out at the current level, it's still very good. Overall the long term trend in India is very positive, given our consumption figures. In tea, we are still exporters, but that situation will change. In 7-10 years, we could become net importers. The scenario looks very positive because of the India story. It is going to make a difference on global prices like sugar and some other agricultural commodities," said Paul.

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The basic premise of the confidence level among Indian producers is a growing consumption at three per cent on a year-on-year basis, which negates the FAO perception that tea prices would ease next year on higher estimated output. Khaitan added that the short rains in Africa were not as good as expected.

Consider the statistics: India is likely to end the year with a shortage of 65 million kg . Factoring in a pipeline shortage in other tea producing countries, like Africa and Sri Lanka, the shortage is 165 million kg.

According to official figures during January-September, world tea production stood at 1275.5 million kg, down by about 89 million kg. Although FAO has said that there may be more plantation in the major producing countries in Asia and Africa, "Some producing countries, such as India, have acted responsibly and announced that they would not be expanding current tea areas beyond what is required for replanting and rehabilitating existing tea gardens" said Kaison Chang, Secretary of FAO's Inter-Governmental Group on Tea, the only international tea authority.

On global tea consumption FAO says that the growth in consumption outpaced production between 2005 and 2009 (an estimated 0.8 per cent as against -0.6 per cent, respectively) the gap between consumption and production growth was largest between 2007 and 2009, when it reached 3.4 percentage points, coinciding with the surge in prices. Some of the price increases were passed along the value chain to consumers as retail prices increased by five percent across supermarkets in Europe.

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First Published: Dec 25 2009 | 12:45 AM IST

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