Darjeeling is home to 87 tea gardens and the ongoing shutdown has pushed them to the brink. The tea garden owners feel that they will be losing 45 per cent of their yearly revenue.
"This is the season of second flush, which gives very high quality tea leaves. The tea that is produced in this season accounts for around 40 per cent of the total revenue generated. We will be losing it completely as the leaves will get elongated," Arun Singh, managing director at Goodricke Group Ltd told PTI.
Flush means picking up of small high quality leaves at the beginning of the season and the tea produced out of it are one of the best in the world.
Darjeeling tea gardens have five flushes in a year. The first flush, also known as spring flush happens in March, the second flush known as summer flush takes place from June 1 - June 30 or first week of July. The rest three are the monsoon flush, autumn flush and winter flush, explained Azam Monem, chairman of Indian Tea Association (ITA).
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S S Bagaria, former chairman of Darjeeling Tea Association and owner of four tea gardens, said the shutdown is a "death knell" for the tea industry of Darjeeling.
"This year in the first flush we had faced losses due to lack of proper rains. In the second flush we are facing this shutdown. We are losing premium quality tea. Now the leaves will get elongated and will have to be slashed off. We will lose both financially and production-wise," S S Bagaria told PTI.
"We are yet to hear anything positive. Apart from the losses, livelihood of lakhs of people are involved," Momen said.