Tea earnings grow to reach Sh85.74 billion

MK254

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Tea earnings rose by 9.4 per cent last season to hit a record Sh85.74 billion setting up farmers for handsome earnings.
This is despite high supply of green leaf dampening returns per kilogramme of the produce.
It also marks the third year of improved earnings consecutively.
Farmers are as such set to receive higher returns on account of improved production despite lower price per kilogramme of green leaf delivered which stood at an average rate of Sh52.51, a drop from Sh58.61 earned in 2017.
Kenya Tea Development Agency linked the drop in price per kilogramme to “escalating costs of production and depressed prices” during the last quarter of the financial year.
Consequently during the year, tea farmers earned a total of Sh62.35 billion as take home pay, 8.6 per cent higher than the Sh57.44 billion paid out in the year to June 2017, translating to better average returns for the over 600,000 growers according to the agency.
The farmers have already earned Sh18.03 billion in initial monthly payments and will receive Sh44.33 billion second payment later this month.
The payout represents a return of 73 per cent of the total tea revenue, while the remaining 27 per cent “went to cover various costs of production,” KTDA said.
“The increased earnings this year were due to high volumes of green leaf produced by farmers as a result of improved rainfall and stable tea prices,” KTDA group chief executive Lerionka Tiampati said. The agency said the period saw a 21 per cent growth in green leaf production as tea-growing areas received improved rainfall compared to the dry conditions experienced the previous year.
KTDA-managed tea factories received a cumulative 1.18 billion kilogrammes of green leaf up from 976.78 million logged during the same period in 2017.
Farmers earn Sh15 per kilogramme of green leaf delivered per month while the rest is paid as second payment after a financial year ends. bKTDA said its factories faced a number of challenges such as high costs of energy and labour among others.
“The factories are also grappling with other challenges such as tea hawking that has led to a reduction in the quantity of green leaf available to some factories, thereby affecting their operating capacity, and quality of leaf available for processing,” it said.
To deal with rising costs of production, KTDA said, factories are investing in small hydropower stations (SHPs) to deliver affordable power to factories. Some of the SHPs that have been completed and are generating electricity include Imenti, Gura and Chania.
Factories have, the agency added, also established wood plantations that are expected to be a long term source of fuel for factories.



Tea earnings grow to reach Sh85.74 billion
 
85Billion is for the KTDA farmers.130 Billion is other industries which are not part of KTDA..Geza ulole you need to understand and reason out before typing
SMH, You dont even understand Tea industry..Jubilee must be happy with pacified idiots like you..Go on be happy 😀
 
Stop embarasing yourself with things you dont know or even understand..Keep the Jubilee propaganda in your head..Its better that way...Oh hail 85bn! pathetic
Look at you acting out of Anxiety ..its KTDA and not Jubilee..That is money for the farmers If it hurts just swallow the bitter pill.
 
Look at you acting out of Anxiety ..its KTDA and not Jubilee..That is money for the farmers If it hurts just swallow the bitter pill.
SMH it will take 3 generations to remove propaganda from Jubilee idiots, this is worse than Nazi germany
 
SMH it will take 3 generations to remove propaganda from Jubilee idiots, this is worse than Nazi germany
Haha seems you even dont know what propaganda is?..KTDA has been in kenya before you were born dude..and why does it pain you that the farmers are to be paid 85 b??
 
Haha seems you even dont know what propaganda is?..KTDA has been in kenya before you were born dude..and why does it pain you that the farmers are to be paid 85 b??
Boss, This info has been debunked as misleading,
2017 = 129bn
2018= 85bn
Those other stories and propagandas you can share and wank with your fellow Jubilee idiots.Leave me out
BTW,You should here what Kalejinga farmers in Rift valley feel about Jubilee.😀😀
 
I like that tea factories are investing in small hydro power stations to minimise their expenses. Very nice! I also wonder, which type of dimwit would see the name KTDA and think of political parties? [emoji15][emoji15][emoji15] I dey tire with this pea brains oo!
 
hahahahhahahhahahahahhhhhhhhhhahhahahahhahahahahahhahah
my poor unlearned friend this is what farmers earned in 2017
2017 - 78.3 billion
2018 - 85 billion
Tea farmers beat severe drought to earn Sh78.3 billion in revenue
differentiate between KTDA revenuesand total tea earnings.
As a matter of fact tea is grown in Muranga,Nyeri,Kiambu,Kisii,Meru ,Tharaka Nithi,Kakamega and Vihiga so its not rift valley alone you Dunder Head.Ktda has more industries in Cenral than in Rift Valley..Rift valley has many Farmers privately owned factories and Multi National Factories.
 
This guy is a real Dimwit..The more he argues the more he uncovers his stupidity.
 
thats Kenya for you...biddi na kazi...uzinduzi wa lifti na ukuta tunawaachia wenzetu LDC
 
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