. Earth Science News .
Kenya's tea production hit by drought

Due to the drop in production, tea export volumes fell from the same period last year.
by Staff Writers
Nairobi (AFP) Jul 25, 2006
Kenyan tea production fell by 19 percent in the first half of 2006 to 134 million kilogrammes (295.4 million pounds) due to a drought in the first quarter of this year, marketers said on Tuesday.

Production declined by 32 million kilogrammes from 166 million (by 70.5 million from 366 million pounds) recorded during the same period last year, with the highest drop registered in tea growing regions in the Rift Valley Province, Tea Board of Kenya chief Sicily Kariuki said in a statement.

She attributed the decline to a severe drought that withered tea bushes in most tea growing regions.

"Despite the recovery of tea bushes owing to long rains experienced between the months of March and May, production shortfall recorded during the first quarter could not be offset due to subdued growth occasioned by the onset of the cold season weather," Kariuki added.

Due to the drop in production, tea export volumes fell from the same period last year.

However, traditional buyers in Ireland and Kazakhstan increased their tea imports from Kenya while Poland recorded a drop.

During the period, local tea consumption rose by 12 percent from 6.6 million kilos to 7.4 million kilos due to local promotion undertaken by the Board along with the tea packers.

Related Links

Drought reduces famous Brazilian waterfall to a trickle
Sao Paulo (AFP) Jul 25, 2006
The celebrated Iguacu Falls, a hugely popular tourist destination on Brazil's border with Argentina, has slowed to a trickle after the worst drought in 70 years hit the region.







  • Living With Climate Variability And Change
  • New Study Fuels Louisiana Subsidence Controversy
  • CapRock Provides Dual Teleport For Back-Up Emergency Communications
  • Half Of Pacific Islands Mangroves Could Disappear Says UN

  • Pine Plantations May Be One Culprit In Increasing Carbon Dioxide Levels
  • New Co2 Data Inverts Current Ice-Age Theory
  • Gas Escaping From Ocean Floor May Drive Global Warming
  • Centuries Of Land-Use Practices Profoundly Impact Earth System

  • NASA Releases First CALIPSO Images
  • European Airborne Campaign Simulates Sentinel Imagery Over Land
  • Denver To Host International Remote Sensing Conference
  • Cardiff From Earth Space

  • Fuel Cells, A Neglected Clean Source Of Energy
  • Exiled Tibetan government warns against increased mining
  • European retirees creating a boom market for Thai property
  • Greenland Begins Sale Of Oil Concessions

  • HIV breakthrough needs support
  • Scientists Develop SARS Vaccine
  • Avian Flu Numbers Increase Across SE Asia
  • China Clamps Down On Flu Talk

  • Ancient Global Warming Drove Early Primate Dispersal
  • Scientists to sequence Neanderthal DNA
  • It's All In The Genes
  • Tyrannosaur Survivorship -- Tough Times For Teens

  • Shell says oil pipeline leak in Nigeria slashes daily output
  • Bird Brains Shrink From Exposure To Contaminants
  • Pharmaceuticals May Not Pose Major Aquatic Environmental Risks
  • Too Little Data Available to Assess Risk of Sludge

  • Germans Set Up An Apartheid-Like Society In Saxon Britain
  • Present-Day Non-Human Primates May Be Linchpin In Evolution Of Language
  • Trade Of Humans Is Big Business
  • Talk To Your Baby And They Learn To Speak

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement