Monday 7 November 2011

up by 42%!

India's coffee exports up 42 pc in 2010-11 crop year: ICO

NEW DELHI: India's coffee exports rose by 42 per cent to 3,60,540 tonnes in the 2010-11 coffee year ended September this year, according to a report by the International Coffee Organisation (ICO).

Shipments of the brew from the country stood at 2,53,895 tonnes on the 2009-10 coffee year (October-September), ICO data said.

According to the government-owned Coffee Board of India, the country's exports of the brew rose by 31 per cent to 3,60,540 tonnes in the last coffee year against 2,71,859 tonnes in the 2009-10 coffee year.

However, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has put coffee exports from India much lower than that of the Coffee Board and the ICO.

Tea and Coffee prices are going up!

High coffee, tea prices boost exporters’ earnings
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A woman plucking tea at a plantation in Nandi Hills. Photo/JARED NYATAYA

By ALLAN ODHIAMBO (email the author)

Posted Sunday, November 6 2011 at 20:06

Beverage exporters are expecting a boom in earnings this year following sustained high prices and favourable foreign currency exchange rates.

New data from both the Nairobi Coffee Exchange (NCE) and regional tea auction in Mombasa show that earnings for the soon ending 2010/11 season would hit historic highs.

“The prices of coffee have been very high this season and the earnings at the end of the season will be good,” said Isaac Muchomba, secretary of the Kenya Coffee Traders Association.

By the end of September, total earnings at the coffee exchange had hit Sh21.5 billion from the sale of 552,057 bags and with several auctions to spare.

The country earned Sh16 billion from the 2009/10 coffee season, having jumped 50 per cent from the previous year, according to statistics from the Coffee Board of Kenya.

“The supply of coffee crop was extremely low this season and that has boosted prices on demand,” Mr Muchomba said.

The country’s coffee marketing season has this year had massive challenges brought about but supply shortages that even saw the auction sessions temporarily cut short in April.

The shortfall has partly been blamed on an unusually early crop this season.
Traditionally, coffee volumes at auction surge around March but they peaked earlier this year after the country witnessed unusually heavy rains in the first months of last year.

Because of the unpredictable weather, coffee bushes flowered when they should not and produced coffee berries at different stages of maturity.

The country’s coffee marketing season traditionally breaks around the July-August window.

This was, however, not the case this time owing to supply shortage that forced managers at the NCE to suspend trading nearly three months earlier.

A head of the forced break in April, the volume of crop offered for sale at the auction had dropped to an average 10,000-15,000 bag per auction against an optimal 30,000 bags.

Tea traders at the Mombasa auction are also expecting a boom in earning this year supported by higher prices.

Tea Board of Kenya (TBK) exports could fetch more than Sh100 billion this year, surpassing last year’s Sh97 billion.

Tea traders from Kenya and Burundi have reaped most from quality crop to post the highest price increases at the weekly regional auction over the past 12 months.



http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/High+coffee+tea+prices+boost+exporters+earnings++/-/539552/1268356/-/qgxvgkz/-/

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