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Saturday, January 31, 2009

Stress on quality tea for growth

Silchar, Jan. 31: Tea Association of India president Shashank Prashad today underscored the need to produce quality tea for the industry to thrive, particularly in the CTC tea-producing Brahmaputra Valley and the Cachar region.

He was speaking at the 38th annual general meeting of the Barak Valley branch of the TAI here today.

The Inter-governmental Group on Tea, an international lobby, in its ruling in China last year, had said there should be no expansion in the tea-producing areas worldwide, particularly in the Brahmaputra Valley and Cachar region.

Against the backdrop of the ruling, Prashad said the tea plantations in the Brahmaputra Valley and the Cachar region should focus on a qualitative increase in the productivity of land and labour.

The TAI president attributed low land productivity as a root cause for sickness in the tea plantations. He urged the planters to reorient their strategies to produce quality teas.

Prashad underlined the need to weed out complexities in the procedural formalities and inordinate delay in the sanction of funds by the Centre under the Special Purpose Tea Fund (SPTF) scheme.

He thanked the Centre for amending the loan terms under the scheme by including the Cachar gardens within the ambit of loans with heavy subsidy for the rejuvenation of the old tea bushes.

From The Telegraph

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Tea exports - low hanging fruit for forex earnings

Tea exports, which are Sri Lanka’s mainstay in agricultural export topped the US$1 billion mark in 2007 thus showing the sector’s potential after government divested the plantation in 1992. These earnings were a tremendous boost to the industry that also plays a key role in employment generation and social welfare. When the global turmoil was spreading the belief was that Sri Lanka was immune due to its limited connectivity and capital account controls.

However from October, Colombo auction prices began to decline rapidly with huge quantities of tea remaining unsold due to lack of demand. This resulted in a vicious circle of debts from exporter to producer thus sending shockwaves in a industry poised for record earnings. With 60% of the production coming from smallholdings the effect on the rural economy was devastating. The average auction price at the last sale of 2008 was Rs 225/kg as against Rs 340 in the previous year thus losing nearly $1 per kilogram.

New Year brings hope
The New Year seems to have brought some hope to the industry with auction prices showing a steady improvement. The first two auctions lit up a depressed tea sector with significant price gains. The second sale of the year averaged to Rs 274 improving from the Rs 253 recorded in the first. Price gains were recorded from all elevations and the trend has been consistent. The industry should not be complacent and must continue with cautious optimism. During the tough depressed times the industry reacted well by taking certain crucial steps that paid dividends. The authorities decided to restrict private sales and ensured that the auction is stronger and quality was emphasized.

Emphasis on quality
Strict surveillance on quality must be pursued with the Tea Board along with brokers and the auction authorities to ensure poor quality teas doesn’t reach the auctions. During the peak price levels there has been a tendency for quick gains and quality has been the casualty. It is also no secret that thefts and adulteration carried out on a large scale and stealing tea in the highways of Colombo too has been reported. A few years ago the Tea Board was able to initiate legal action and expose such crimes. Since such operators have a tendency to re-emerge every effort must be made to enforce the law to protect the good name of Ceylon Tea. Since independence the industry has weathered many storms to become stronger. During the insurrection periods of 1971 and 1989 many tea industry personnel sacrificed their lives, some factories were burnt and the employees and their families lived in fear. Even though the land reform legislation had good intentions politicization saw great losses to the industry and the economy along with mass exodus of expertise.

New look industry
Price fluctuations in commodities is nothing new and perhaps the tea sector should emerge stronger from the present crisis. Vast improvement made during the last two decades in quality enhancement (ISO, HACCP) improved living conditions for plantations workers, surveillance by the ethical tea sourcing partnership and continuing investments by the companies have given strength and a new look to the industry. Tea smallholders have become a major force with high productivity and lower cost of production.

Minimize negative factors
Declining reserves and the persistent macro economic deficiencies will pose a major problem to the Sri Lanka economy in 2009. These could worsen with a decline in worker remittances. In this situation assisting the export sector is a priority and a necessity for the government, and tea has the potential to enhance foreign exchange earnings than any other source. As agitated by exporters, a competitive exchange rate is more than a necessity in the background of devaluations carried out by our competitors during the last six months - Kenya (19.8%), India (12.1) Vietnam (3.8%) and Indonesia (18.2%). Apart from these, negative factors in taxation in ESC, proposal for a Nation Building levy and the export CESS needs to be reviewed. The tea cess was raised during the peak market conditions and an adjustment is opportune to suit the present needs and increase competitiveness.

Recovery in sight
The price levels of the last two years are unlikely to be repeated due to a decline in petroleum prices and next to CIS our major buyers are from such countries where there are credit limitations due to banking problems. On the positive side increasing consumption in India would lead to curtailment of exports and the rise in black tea consumption. China is another opportunity. Kenya, Sri Lanka’s main competitor, experienced a significant production decline in 2008 as against Sri Lanka’s increase. Demand for black tea could rise due to export shortfalls.Most importantly unlike in most other beverages the share of tea in the disposable income of consumers is not significant to anticipate a cut down. These factors do indicate that tea exports could stage a recovery in 2009.

From The Sunday Times

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Friday, January 30, 2009

Tata Tea Q3 Group Net Profit Drops, Absent Of Year-Ago Gain

Friday, Tata Tea Ltd., the largest tea manufacturing company in India, reported a lower consolidated net profit for the third-quarter in the absence of a year-ago gain from the stock sale. However, on standalone basis, the company reported higher net profit for the quarter.

Consolidated Results

The Kolkata-based company posted third-quarter consolidated net profit of Rs.396.12 crore or Rs.64.06 per share, 69% lower than Rs.1,292.22 crore or Rs.208.96 per share in the third-quarter of 2007, which included a one-time gain of Rs.1,604.74 crore on sale of its stake in Energy Brands Inc.

The company said the previous period's figures have been rearranged to the extent necessary, to conform to the current period's figures. Therefore, the comparative figures have been restated to exclude North India Plantation Division and certain related adjustments effected to make them comparable with the current quarter.

The company said its recent quarter results included a one-time foreign exchange gain of Rs.580.41 crore on restatement of foreign currency deposits/loans, compared with Rs.38.25 crore in the prior-year quarter.

The company's quarterly consolidated revenue from operations increased 15% to Rs.1,300.86 crore from Rs.1,135.56 crore in the year-ago quarter, while other operating income totaled to Rs.5.93 crore, compared with Rs.8.07 crore in the prior year quarter.

During the quarter, revenue from Tea segment rose 12% to Rs.1,013.01 crore from Rs.902.20 core in the corresponding quarter last year, while revenue from Coffee & Other Produce amounted to Rs.285.59 crore, up 20% from Rs.238.94 crore in the year-ago quarter. Revenue from others were Rs.8.19 crore, compared with Rs.2.49 crores in the previous year quarter.

For the first nine months, Tata Tea's consolidated net profit fell 51% to Rs.689.57 crore from Rs.1,417.46 crore in the corresponding period last year. Total revenue grew 13% to Rs.3,647.99 crore from Rs.3,215.51 crore for the comparable period a year-ago.

Standalone Results

The company's third-quarter standalone net profit grew 10% to Rs.48.30 crore from Rs.43.78 crore in the third-quarter of 2007. Total revenue, including other operating income, increased 22% to Rs.382.75 crore from Rs.314.08 crore in the year-ago quarter.

For the Apr-Dec 2008 period, Tata Tea's standalone net profit rose 6% to Rs.129.80 crore from Rs.121.91 crore for the comparable period last year. Total revenue grew 16% to Rs.1,022.04 crore from Rs.878.41 crore for the comparable period a year-ago.

The company said its board has decided to relocate Managing Director, P.T. Singanporia to London, However, he will continue to be the company's Managing Director and will also be responsible for global manufacturing operations as well as buying and blending, supply chain and related activities for some regions.

At the BSE, Tata Tea closed Friday's trading at Rs.607.10, down by Rs.15.95 or 2.56% on a volume of around 49K shares.

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Mixed response to Tea

Tea met with mixed response in the sale held here on January 8 and 9. A total of over 14.68 lakh kg of tea were offered in the sale.

In the Orthodox Leaf market whole-leaf grades met with fair demand and sold at irregularly lower levels by a rupee to Rs two. The secondaries and fannings were absorbed at barely steady levels.

Selective demand was witnessed on the range of teas on offer in the CTC leaf market due to non-movement of teas to their destinations because of the All India Trucker strike.

Select brighter liquoring teas fetched dearer prices on competition while the others were fully firm. The better medium and medium sorts were irregular and lower by up to a rupee.

However, the plainer teas met with good demand and sold at firm to occasionally dearer levels, especially the cleaner and blacker varieties.

Select flavoury primary dusts met with good demand and sold at premium levels while the others were irregular and lower in the orthodox dust market. Leaf secondaries were irregularly lower by up to Rs two, while the powdery residuals were absorbed at last levels.

Good demand was witnessed on the brighter liquoring teas which were absorbed at firm to dearer rates in the CTC dust market.

From PTI

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Tea Board will allow only cash-and-carry settlements from now

Cash-and-carry settlements have been introduced at all auction centres in southern India quite some time ago, but buyers and auctioneers in the east have resisted it so far

Kolkata: The Tea Board of India has said it will only allow cash-and-carry settlements of auctions, after auctioneer Carritt Moran and Co. Pvt. Ltd defaulted on payments to tea producers.

The board said in its 22 January order that auctioneers should release tea from warehouses only after buyers pay. This will be effective from the next auction—sale 5—scheduled next week at Kolkata, Guwahati and Siliguri.

“The move is aimed at discouraging brokers from giving cash credit to buyers,” said Roshni Sen, deputy chairman of the board. “Our aim eventually is to stamp out the practice of lending to buyers and producers, for which auctioneers such as Carritt are suffering.”

The 131-year-old Carritt Moran, the world’s second largest tea auctioneer, went belly up after failing to pay producers and was found to have diverted money paid to it by buyers to service its own debts.

The board will appoint a settlement banker so that auctioneers don’t settle trades on their own. “Four private banks have already made presentations, and we expect to appoint a settlement banker within a month or so,” said Sen.

India produces around 950 million kg of tea a year, half of which is auctioned.
Cash-and-carry settlements have been introduced at all auction centres in southern India quite some time ago, but buyers and auctioneers in the east have resisted it so far.

“The Tea Board has been contemplating the introduction of cash-and-carry settlement for quite some time... The fall of Carritt has given (it) the strength to push through systemic reforms,” Sen said.

Buyers currently have to pay within 14 days—called prompt period. Though this is not being reduced immediately, the National Stock Exchange (NSE) has suggested that it should be cut to three days. Sen said the board it still considering NSE’s suggestions. However, brokers are not permitted to extend credit to buyers beyond the prompt period.

Some buyers are opposing cash-and-carry because they fear for their survival without credit from auctioneers, said Rabindra Nath De, director of Star Tea Co. Pvt. Ltd. “But the Tea Board doesn’t seem to be in a mood to budge.”

McLeod Russel India Ltd, the world’s biggest tea plantation company, is happy with the move, however. The auction system will be more foolproof, said Aditya Khaitan, managing director of McLeod Russel.

Author: Aveek Datta
From: LiveMint

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Iran to pay for Indian tea in euro now

Kolkata (IANS): Iran has decided to pay India in euros instead of US dollars for the tea it imports from this country, Tea Board of India chief Basudeb Banerjee said after returning from a three-day visit to Iran.

India exports 11-12 million kg of tea to Iran every year at an average price of Rs.107 ($2.22 or 1.64 euro) per kg. Its total 189 mn kg tea export in 2007-08 was worth Rs.18.89 billion (Rs.1,889 crore or $381 million/ 289 million euro) .

"In Tehran we met officials of Asian Clearing Union (ACU) headquartered there where it was decided that due to payment related problems, Iranian importers would start dealing in euro from Jan 15," Banerjee told IANS.

ACU has been promoted by the UN with the central banks of Iran, India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka as its members.

The delegation was headed by additional secretary in commerce ministry T.K. Chowdhury. Banerjee and representatives of tea producing companies like McLeod Russel and Rossell Tea and also exporters like Shah Brothers Ltd were in the delegation.

"The three-day meeting in Iran (staring from Jan 3) was very successful. We have discussed all the major issues with the deputy ministers there," Banerjee said.

The delegation discussed the registration charge of $7,000 imposed by the Iranian government in 2007 on exporters under the local Good Manufacturing Practices Act.

"The registration charge will remain but earlier there was delay in the process of trading even after paying that charge. Now they have said they will expedite the process," Banerjee said.

Indian exporters considered this charge high and unnecessary as they were already following recognised manufacturing standards like Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP). HACCP is used in the food industry to identify potential food safety hazards.

Earlier, consignments were not cleared from the port despite paying charges, which resulted in demurrage charges imposed on exporters by port authorities.

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Tea draft to tap new energy sources

Siliguri, Jan. 28: The West Bengal Green Energy Development Corporation, in association with the Tea Board of India, has decided to draft a package to promote the use of renewable and eco-friendly energy sources in the tea estates of north India.

The corporation hopes such a package would help curb pollution and promote conservation of orthodox fuel and energy sources like coal, diesel and electricity.

The decision to formulate the programme aimed at developing the practice of using renewable energy in gardens was taken at a meeting attended by the officials of the tea board and the corporation and secretary of the Union ministry of new and renewable energy Deepak Gupta in Calcutta on January 23.

“In the package, there will be proposals for development of micro-hydel projects in the tea plantations, use of energy generated from leaves and dry biomass instead of diesel, wood, coal and electricity in brew processing units,” S.P. Gon Choudhuri, the managing director of the corporation, said over the phone from Calcutta today.

“If the tea gardens in the Terai and the Dooars, which get good sunlight, can use machines fitted to solar panels to dry processed tealeaves, the existing resources will be saved and pollution will be mitigated to a large extent,” said Choudhuri.

According to him, implementation of these proposals in tea estates can reduce the use of orthodox energy resources and fuels upto 60 per cent and will substantially cut down overheads.

“In a number of tea estates in Darjeeling hills and Assam, there are streams and waterfalls which can be used to generate power sufficient for the garden. However, impediments like capital expenditure for the projects need to be removed by means of subsidies from the Centre and the corporation,” said the official. “We are assessing the tentative costs of the project, extent of benefits that can be reaped from the scheme, subsidies available and obviously the tentative investment by gardens.”

The project has been envisaged for brew belts like Darjeeling, the Terai and the Dooars in Bengal and the entire tea zone of Assam.

Stakeholders of the industry, who were present at the meeting, have appreciated the move.

“By using alternative fuels and renewable energies, it is natural that production costs would come down. If there are subsidies, the industry can feel attracted to the projects that will minimise costs, pollution as well as hazards involved in collecting fuel. We welcome the effort and look forward to see the package being formulated,” said Monojit Dasgupta, secretary-general of the Indian Tea Association.

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R-Day prize for garden girls

Jaigaon, Jan. 28: The girls of Chengmari Tea Estate High School in Nagrakata returned today with the second prize for the Republic Day march-past in Calcutta after vying with 15 other institutions from across the state.

The headmaster of the school, Shibkumar Jha, said his institution was the only one from Jalpaiguri district to participate in the march-past, taking the salute from governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi. “We had sent 60 girls, with three teachers accompanying them, to take part in the march-past a month ago. They were put up at the Salt Lake stadium and trained in marching skill by jawans of the Eastern Command at the Maidan,” the headmaster said. He added that Basantapur Jhareswari Bani Bhaban School, West Midnapore, had topped the competition.

He said the marchers were led by Saroja Majhi, a Class IX student who stays with her parents in Rangamati tea garden.

“We became runners-up although we participated for the first time. We were happy to show off our skills to the governor,” said Saroja.

The girls were presented with a gleaming trophy and certificates by Brigadier P.K. Sanyal of the Eastern Command.

“We were stunned by the vastness of the city and we were very glad that we had an opportunity to see Calcutta, something we had never dreamed of,” she said.

The chairman of the school management committee, D.S. Parmar, who is also the manager of the tea estate, said almost all the 2,000 students were the children of garden workers. “I am proud that they brought glory to the school despite the little opportunities they have.”

Today, the students alighted at the Carron station where a reception was hosted for them. The girls walked all 3km with their trophy to reach the school.

The secretary of the school’s managing committee, Kumar Thapa, said the students would be felicitated at a special function later on. He added that all the expenses were borne by the school education department.

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Govt targets Egypt, Iran to boost tea exports

NEW DELHI: The commerce ministry is brewing a fresh strategy to shore up tea exports that have seen a decline in traditional markets such as the UK and Russia in the face of competition from Sri Lanka and Kenya. The Tea Board, an undertaking of the ministry, is working with planters' body UPASI to open an export base in Cairo after identifying Egypt, Iran and Pakistan as thrust areas.

Egypt's state-run Misr Import and Export is willing to provide accommodation for the proposed India Tea Promotion Centre. The focus at this point will be on Egypt, where Indian tea occupied a substantial presence till the early nineties, and Iran as Pakistan is unlikely to figure in the ministry's scheme of things in the politically-charged atmosphere after 26/11. A team also visited Iran to sort out issues related to banking and letters of credit from Iranian banks.

Past complaints over quality of Indian tea exports, where the samples shown by an exporter often did not match the consignments, have this time evoked proposals that mandatory pre-shipment inspection by a panel of experts be carried out to match the samples with that of tea being dispatched if the business is transacted through this centre.

During 1981, India exported 18.76 million kg, or 35%, of the 53 million kg tea imported by Egypt. After the COMESA trade agreement came into force among the African countries in 1994, importing tea from India became more expensive on account of higher duties. This opportunity was utilised by Kenya which wrested substantial market share. From an average of 13.5 million kg from 1971 to 1990, tea imports from India came down to 5.6 million kg in the nineties and less than half a million kg from 2001 to 2005.

Egypt has since 2006 rationalised import duty structure, making it attractive for Indian tea exporters. Export of Indian tea too has gone up to nearly five million kg in 2007. India is now looking at exporting 15-20 million kg this year. The new base will aim at building on the changed situation.

Economic Times

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Tea planters seek more sops

SILIGURI: Tea entrepreneurs from Darjeeling have called for higher rate of assistance under the Special Purpose Tea Fund (SPTF).

“Due to cold conditions, the time taken by a young tea bush in Darjeeling to produce the yield is longer than the national average. Moreover, soil conditions here also prolong the gestation period,” said Darjeeling Tea Association (DTA) chairman S Bansal.

“Naturally, it requires higher rate of replantation and rejuvenation to maintain stable production level for a longer term. A higher rate of assistance under SPTF can ensure that.”

DTA has already made an appeal in this regard to Union minister of state for commerce and power Jairam Ramesh. He told ET that the usual old annual tea bush replantation rate of near 0.5% only has gone up to near 6% in last two years after SPTF introduction. “There are applications for replantation in 1,300 hectare (ha) land of Darjeeling hills and over 9,000 ha needs to be replanted soon. It will take over seven years. But we need it to do that much earlier,” he added.

Under the Rs 4,700-crore SPTF, eligible planters can have loan and subsidy for replantation at 50% and 25%, respectively.

Though the subsidy scheme for replantation had been there for long, it could hardly keep the yielding bushes adequately young.

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Stir over workers’ suspension

JALPAIGURI, Jan. 27: A section of the Dangapara Division of Madarihat Land Project of Duncans Tea Company workers today confined the assistant manager of the tea plantation, Mr Manprit Singh, after he suspended four workers today.

According to the West Bengal State Chaa Majdur Sangha (affiliated to Hind Majdur Sabha) secretary, Mr Anjan Chakraborty, an allegation of misappropriation of funds by manipulating the paybook of workers' payment was leveled against the plantation official.

He also said that the official had instructed the labourers to pluck at least 30 kg tea leaves per day despite knowing that they normally pluck 24 kg of leaves on an average.

The district PDS secretary, Mr Jainal Pramanik, said that the assistant manager today suspended four workers of the plantation following which, the workers gheraoed him for almost six hours.

The SDO Falakata, Mr Alias Vez, said that he sent police to the plantation after the trade Union leaders informed him of the matter.

The assistant manager Mr Manprit Singh, however, denied all the allegations. “We have not manipulated the paybook and the four were suspended since they had misinformed the media about the management of the plantation,” Mr Singh said. The agitators withdrew after the plantation manager, Mr Sanjay Gurtu, assured them that their grievances would be heard at a meeting with the authorities tonight.

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Monday, January 26, 2009

Darjeeling tea area to be enhanced

The proposed upgradation of research facility at Kurseong will increase production and productivity.

Kolkata: The Darjeeling tea industry plans to bring about 10,000 additional hectares under tea cultivation over the next few years, Sanjay Bansal, Chairman of the Darjeeling Tea Association, the industry apex body said.

He told The Hindu that this was necessary to compensate for the loss of crop that would result from the replantation and rejuvenation programme now under implementation under the Special Purpose Tea Fund (SPTF).

At present, about 40 per cent of the licensed land amounting to about 17,500 hectares is used for growing the famous brew. The present area is spread over 87 tea estates.

Darjeeling tea accounts for eight per cent of the total value of production and is certainly one of India’s best known commodity exports.

The proposed upgradation of the existing research facility at Kurseong by the Tea Board aims to increase production and productivity.

Source: The Hindu

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GJM to start collecting tea tax

SILIGURI: Vowing to continue its peaceful movement till Gorkhaland was realized, Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) said on Sunday that it would begin collecting "tea tax" in Darjeeling from March 7 and demanded an auction centre in the Hills itself instead of the plains.

From March 7, Darjeeling tea packets would have Made in Gorkhaland' tags instead of West Bengal, said GJM general secretary Roshan Giri. The tax paid by planters to the state government so far would now be diverted to the GJM fund against proper receipts. The money would be used for the development of Hills, he added.

The GJM leader also demanded that a tea auction centre be set up in the Hills itself. Asserting that there would be no let up in the movement demanding permission to hold rallies in the Dooars "to unite the Gorkhas and Adivasis in the foothills", Giri said CPM was creating trouble in the area with the help of police.

"The Marxists, with the help of police, are throttling democracy by not allowing GJM to carry out its political activities in the Dooars," he said.

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Green energy plan for tea industry

Kolkata: Renewable energy is all set to be used in the tea industry to reduce manufacturing costs and maintain ecological balance in the Darjeeling Hills, Dooars and Assam. The Tea Board of India and West Bengal Green Energy Development Corporation (WBGEDC) have jointly decided to prepare a package, to be submitted to the Centre.

WBGEDC managing director S P Gonchoudhuri said they held a meeting with tea board officials and several tea associations to discuss adoption of green energy in tea gardens. “We and the tea board will prepare a plan, which will be submitted to the Centre. The package will seek to reduce existing levels of energy consumption to maintain the eco-system of the Hills,” he said.

Indian Tea Association secretary-general Monojit Dasgupta said they were very interested in using renewable energy sources in the tea industry. “The use of solar energy in the industry was planned earlier, too, but the usage cost was high. Now, there are subsidy schemes available for these energy sources,” he said.

Gonchoudhuri said the eco-system of the Dooars, Assam and Darjeeling is being affected due to deforestation and pollution caused by tea factories. “Besides, the cost of manufacturing tea should also be reduced. Solar, bio-fuel and micro-hydel energy could be effectively used,” he said.

Officials said trucks bring in firewood to the factories that produce tea, thereby increasing vehicular pollution and deforestation. If renewable energies are adopted, a great amount of diesel could be saved, apart from reducing deforestation and vehicular pollution, they added.

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Auctioneer Carritt in trouble, defaults on payment obligations

Kolkata: Auctioneer Carritt Moran and Co. Pvt. Ltd has failed to pay tea producers who sold through it in the first week of January, in the first such instance in at least three decades.

Carritt—the second largest tea auctioneer in the world—was yet to fulfil payment obligations for Calcutta sale 1 as of Thursday.

“The shortfall was around Rs1 crore. That’s about 22% of Carritt’s total dues (for sale 1),” said an official of the Calcutta Tea Traders Association, or CTTA, which organizes the auctions. He spoke on condition of anonymity.

Producers have been allowed to withdraw their tea from its catalogue, said Roshni Sen, deputy chairman of Tea Board of India, the industry regulator.

“The decision was taken on request from sellers,” she said.

Lots from Carritt’s catalogue are being assigned to other brokers ahead of the next auction—Calcutta sale 4—on 27 January.

On Thursday evening, the Tea Board also ordered opening of an escrow account and asked people who have bought tea from Carritt to pay into it. This is aimed at making sure Carritt doesn’t divert money paid by buyers to service its own liabilities, Sen said.

Some people, however, might have already paid their dues to Carritt directly, and the money might have been diverted.

“So on Tuesday (27 January), when payments are to be made for (Calcutta) sale 2, Carritt might default again,” said the CTTA official.

The auctioneer, however, is expected to fulfil its payment obligations for the Siliguri and Guwahati auctions, he added.

Carritt, a 131-year-old auctioneer, has been lending to small and medium tea growers, mostly in south India, for many years.

The auctioneer had borrowed from private financiers to lend to tea producers. But many of these loans have not been repaid, and according to Carritt’s chairman P.K. Sen, the company was to receive around Rs36 crore from tea producers.

Carritt’s own liabilities are believed to be in excess of Rs50 crore, and even after setting off “all assets on its books, there’s a Rs30 crore gap,” said a tea industry official close to the Carritt management, on condition of anonymity.

Carritt’s Sen was not available to comment. Calls made to his cellphone were not answered.

Lending to tea producers was the only way to expand business during lean years, said the industry official.

“A broker typically lends against yet-to-be ready crop, and makes sure the crop is sold through it,” he explained. “Almost all brokers had got into that business, but Carritt is suffering because of bad cash management.”

Tea Board’s Sen said: “There were big management deficiencies in Carritt. We are trying our best to salvage the company, but it might have to be closed down.”

Carritt, which sells tea worth around Rs1,000 crore a year and earns 1% of that by way of commission, would never be able to pay off its liabilities with income from auctions, she added.

The Economic Times newspaper first reported in its Kolkata edition on Friday that Carritt was facing a financial crisis.

Even before Carritt collapsed, the Tea Board had asked management consultant Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India Pvt. Ltd to examine if there were systemic risks and suggest measures to improve the tea auction system.

Deloitte is expected to submit its report in eight weeks, according to Roshni Sen.
“It is unfortunate that a company of such history and class (as Carritt) has come to this state. But I continue to have full faith in the auction system, and the measures adopted by the tea board will strengthen the system and make it more secure,” said Aditya Khaitan, managing director of McLeod Russel India Ltd, the world’s biggest tea company.

From: Live Mint

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Friday, January 16, 2009

Jairam, Nirupam rue tea plantation lock outs

SILIGURI, Jan. 15: The Union minister of state for commerce and industry, Mr Jairam Ramesh, today expressed anguish over the repeated legal tangles coming in the way of the Centre's efforts to reopen the locked-out tea plantations in north Bengal. “My failure to reopen all the 14 locked out tea plantations in the region haunts me as I have developed a warm association with the north Bengal-based tea industry over the years. Yet, I cannot be wholly blamed for the failure. The hurdles of litigation has been coming in the way persistently,” he said.

“We have been able to reopen only two of the 14 closed plantations in the state whereas our success rate is much higher in states like Kerala and Assam. In Kerala, 12 out of the 17 closed tea plantations have been re-opened. Yet, in West Bengal all our sincerest endeavour is coming a cropper,” he said.

The Union minister said that whenever the Centre planned actions like nullifying lease in accordance with the tea plantation-related Act against the delinquent owners, they took recourse of litigation and everything got stuck subsequently.
The state industry minister, Mr Nirupam Sen, also expressed concern over the litigation hurdles in the matter of reopening the locked-out plantations. “The state government showcaused two of the locked out plantation owners recently asking them to show why the plantations should not be taken possession of. Yet the next day they approached the court and all our efforts went down the drain. We respect the judiciary, but such things are happening time and again. We feel helpless,” Mr Sen said.

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