COLOMBO, Sept 25: Sri Lanka’s tea exports rose more than 40 per cent in the first eight months of the year and are on track to earn a record 1.4 billion dollars this year, the tea board said on Thursday.

Tea shipments climbed 41 per cent to 883 million dollars from January to August over the same period a year earlier, driven by strong demand from Russia and the oil exporting nations of the Middle East, the Sri Lanka Tea Board said.

Sri Lanka, the world’s largest tea exporter after Kenya, has benefited from the recent global commodity boom with its tea fetching the highest average auction prices on world markets all of this year.

“We’ve enjoyed good weather and the companies have applied fertiliser at the right time despite high world prices (for fertilisers),” said Anil Cooke, senior vice president of privately run Asia Siyaka Commodity brokers.

Tea is of key importance to the economy of Sri Lanka, which is in the grips of a bitter ethnic civil war, since it is the country’s biggest agricultural export.

Sri Lanka’s tea shipments climbed 9.7 per cent to 220.3 million kgs (484.6 million pounds) for the eight months to August from the corresponding period in 2007, the tea board said in a statement.

Sri Lankan tea, marketed under the name Ceylon Tea, is the country’s third largest foreign currency revenue earner. Remittances from Sri Lankans working abroad and garment exports are the two top earners.

The country earned a record 1.02 billion dollars from tea in 2007 and is on track to better its performance and hit a record 1.4 billion dollars this calendar year, said tea board chairman Lalith Hettiarachchi.

Total production is expected to reach 320 million kgs this year thanks to bountiful monsoon rains, sufficient application of fertilisers and no labour problems, the tea board’s Hettiarachchi said.

Tea output slipped by two per cent last year to 304.6 million kgs with the fall blamed on labour unrest that dogged the sector for five years.

Most of Sri Lanka’s 400,000 tea workers are descendants of Indian Tamils transported to the tropical island by its British colonial rulers to work as cheap labour.

Sri Lanka is the world’s fourth-largest producer of tea behind China, India and Kenya.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

A difficult story
Updated 12 Jun, 2026

A difficult story

Unless productivity becomes the dominant target of economic policy, Pakistan will continue to oscillate between crises and fragile recovery.
Rough waters
12 Jun, 2026

Rough waters

AMONGST the key potential triggers for fresh conflict in South Asia is water. The Indian state is behaving in an...
Politicised football
12 Jun, 2026

Politicised football

ALMOST three-and-half years since Lionel Messi led Argentina to FIFA World Cup glory, the latest edition of...
GB polls’ aftermath
Updated 11 Jun, 2026

GB polls’ aftermath

The new administration must address the region’s issues proactively.
Peace in retreat
11 Jun, 2026

Peace in retreat

THE ceasefire announced in April was supposed to create space for negotiations. Instead, it has been repeatedly...
A few good men
11 Jun, 2026

A few good men

IT was a brave move, no doubt. This Tuesday, in the land of the Afghan Taliban, a few good men decided to take a...