The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Boiling mad! Covid clobbers the British cuppa

- By Valerie Elliott

IT’S the brew the nation always turns to in times of crisis – but now even the great British cuppa is coming under threat from the coronaviru­s.

Lockdowns in the world’s biggest tea-producing regions are threatenin­g global supplies, which means the cost of the daily brew is set to rise.

Buyers are scrambling to secure stocks of tea leaves as the pandemic strikes plantation­s in Kenya, the UK’s largest tea supplier, and other African countries. It has already hit major producers in India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia.

Connoisseu­rs of premium teas such as Darjeeling face the biggest increases. Already the first harvest of those leaves has been missed, and prices for the fragrant ‘champagne of teas’ could quadruple.

But industry sources say that even an everyday packet of 40 tea bags could rise in price from an average of £1.35 to £1.40 at the supermarke­t.

Richard Smith, owner of the Kent and Sussex Tea and Coffee Company, said: ‘This is a nervous time for the market. It is highly likely the chaos of coronaviru­s will affect the everyday price of a cup of tea.’

Dave Walsh, manager of Farrer’s tea and coffee merchants in Cumbria, added: ‘There has been some hysteria among traders and we are being watchful at the moment.’

And Jane Pettigrew, director of the UK Tea Academy, said: ‘If tea production is hit by coronaviru­s, it will affect everyone in the industry.’

Kenya, which exports more than 62,000 tons of tea a year to Britain, is currently in lockdown although shipments are still leaving the port of Mombasa.

Although 100 million cups of tea are consumed in the UK each day, the effect of the latest price rise might be cushioned as many firms had already stockpiled before Brexit. Big brands tend to keep at least six months of stock while smaller firms work on a 16-week turnaround.

Tetley said it did not envisage any short-term interrupti­on to supply but was monitoring developmen­ts. Unilever, which owns PG Tips, Liptons and Twinings, did not respond to a request for comment.

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