Data from the latest weekly Mombasa Tea auction reveals that KTDA factories located west of the rift valley continue to fetch low prices and sale volumes compared to their eastern counterparts.
- Out of the 2,448,238 kilograms of tea sold in the auction, only 860,399 kilograms came from factories located west of the rift valley.
- Eastern tea factories fetched KSh 915,232,987 in the KTDA auction, representing about 70% of the total value of tea sold.
- The contrast in prices and sale volumes continues to deepen the woes in the tea industry, as farmers in western factories decry poor bonus payouts.
According to the data, eastern-based factories like Kimunye, Theta, Kagwe, Ikumbi, Kanyenyaini, Igembe, Imenti, and Mataara registered the highest values of tea sold. Those in the Rift Valley like Kapset, Kolel, Litein, Kaptumo, Chebut, Boito, Motigo, and Mogogosiek fetched lowest values.
Last month, tea farmers from various regions in the western-based factories complained about poor bonuses with some factories like Nyamachae, Mogogosiek and Kapset declaring payouts worth KSh 20 per kilogram. Others paid little or no increments despite earlier promises by their respective factories.
On the flip side, factories in the central region all the way to Meru, paid their farmers as high as KSh 60 per kilogram, with many prices ranging in the fifties and forties. The stark differences in bonuses led to the eruption of riots in many tea factories where farmers were dissatisfied, accusing their directors of cheating them.
The violence that ensued in some areas across the South Rift led to the destruction of factories’ properties and disruptions in activities. Police responded viciously, killing one person and injuring scores of other protesting farmers.
KTDA assured farmers that these complaints were being taken into consideration but allayed questions on massive price variations with explanations about how quality from different regions influenced sales at the auction. The agency’s chair, Enos Njeru, said that bonus figures as set for each factory was in tandem with global accounting standards.
“Tea from different factories fetch varying prices ar markets – either through the auction or direct sales. This difference is driven by consumer preference with buyers willing to pay a higher price for teas from some factories due to factors such as type of soil, altitude, climate, and rainfall quantity,” KTDA explained.
The situation in the tea industry has been compounded by the country’s inability to clear pending stocks from the previous year. More than 100 million kilograms remained unsold due to diminishing quality and existent price floors that hinder flexibility.
The agency blocked direct sales and removed the price floors causing a glut of stocks to hasten sales, but this also led to the slump in bonus rates. The declining value of Kenyan tea in the East African market has led farmers to contemplate whether the costs of production are worth it, even as over 600,000 farmers await bonus payouts in the middle of this month.