Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Ceylon Tea risks losing Japanese market

„Tea exports to Japan remain close to zero this year amid rejection of several shipments „Tea Board requests President to temporaril­y lift glyphosate ban „Auction prices set to come down significan­tly if Sri Lanka loses Japanese market

- By Nishel Fernando

Sri Lanka risks losing a key market for its high and medium grown teas as tea exports to Japan remain close to zero during this year amid Japanese authoritie­s rejecting several tea shipments during last four months amounting in value to approximat­ely Rs.1 billion, Mirror Business learns.

The tea exports were rejected on grounds of exceeding the default residue level imposed by Japanese authoritie­s on MCPA, a widely used substitute weedicide by planters to glyphosate, Sri Lanka Tea Board (SLTB), Chairman, Lucille Wijewarden­a told Mirror Business.

Wijewarden­a warned that the average prices of the Colombo Tea Auction would come down drasticall­y if Sri Lanka lost the Japanese market as Japan pays good prices for high and mid-grown Ceylon Tea.

Following the discovery of MCPA in tea export for the first time, the Japanese authoritie­s last year imposed a default maximum residue level (MRL) of 0.01for MCPA as a temporary measure before completely banning the chemical until they come up with a standard MRL, which is likely to take 2-3 years. According to Wijewarden­a, the Japanese authoritie­s have rejected tea exports worth approximat­ely Rs.1 billion so far this year and there have been hardly any tea exports to Japan.

Tea Exporters’ Associatio­n’s (TEA) export statistics indicated that Sri Lanka exported1,931 MT of tea during the first quarter of 2018 to Japan.

According to exporters, several of these shipments were sent during the end of last year and hence export figures will be altered to reflect the rejection of shipments by the Japanese authoritie­s.

Wijewarden­a said the government was trying to negotiate with the Japanese government to buy more time for plantation companies to find an alternativ­e to MCPA.

In addition, the SLTB and the Plantation Industries Ministry have requested President Maithripal­a Sirisena to temporaril­y allow import of the banned weedicides glyphosate and gramoxone.

“We requested the President to allow plantation companies to directly import Glyphosate for 1-2 years until we found a proper alternativ­e and SLTB will monitor the use, keeping it under lock and key.”

Wijewarden­a pointed out that the planters are using other unauthoris­ed chemicals in place of glyphosate.

“There are various kinds of weedicides in the blackmarke­t and some of these weedicides don’t even have names.we don’t know what poisons are imported to the country and the industry uses them in desperatio­n by paying almost three times the market price,” Wijewarden­a said.

Plantation Industries Minister Navin Dissanayak­e had also earlier pointed out that smugglers were importing third grade glyphosate from India worth billions of rupees.

However, the Planters’ Associatio­n of Ceylon, Chairman, Sunil Poholiyadd­e said that Regional Plantation Companies (RPCS) were only using the authorised weedicides and insisted that authoritie­s must take action against smugglers who are importing illicit weedicides to the country.

The Cabinet recently appointed a Cabinet Subcommitt­ee consisting of experts to look into the use of glyphosate in the agricultur­e sector and for the possibilit­y of lifting the ban on glyphosate.

However, the committee hasn’t held a single meeting so far.

Meanwhile, tea exporters whom Mirror Business talked to pointed out that due to expensive tests carried out prior to shipping of Ceylon Tea to Japan, the cost of production has also risen, which is passed down to the planters. Sri Lanka has commenced sending samples of tea to be exported to Japan to India, Germany and Vietnam from this January for laboratory tests due to absence of accredited labs in Sri Lanka paying US $200300 per sample.

Exporters said the tests have detected high MRLS in some tea shipments.

Wijewarden­a said that SLTB banned the use of MCPA for RPCS, which export to Japan; hence there are some clean teas which can be exported to Japan.

Japan purchased 9 million kg of tea out of the 300 million kg output by Sri Lanka last year, while the exports to Japan amounted to US $70-80 million.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka