conformity to quality standards in international tea markets the case of south indian tea marianne...

30
Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Upload: karin-mckenzie

Post on 22-Dec-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea MarketsThe Case of South Indian tea

Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Page 2: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Introduction

• Market concentration high (OECD countries) – few players (large branded tea manufacturers) such as Unilever, Tata Tetley, Twinings

• Slow growth in tea consumption in traditional importing countries in Europe – quality differentiation a key strategy in order to stimulate demand and maintain market position

• Product differentiation and chain restructuring in European markets fairly well-known, but little is know about product and quality requirements in emerging markets in Asia, the Middle East, CIS countries.

• Asia is currently the largest importer, followed by Europe, Africa and Russia

Page 3: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Introduction (cont.)

1) The ‘tea market’ is highly segmented - Quality requirements and reward structures - Tea products are almost always in blended form (or

defined by geographical indicators, single origin) - ‘Quality by design’ (a blend contains different grades

(with different ‘quality attributes’); processing methods)

2) A tendency to move away from spot market transactions to other forms of vertical coordination between producers and processors – quality management

3) Improvement in quality management practices by small tea growers constrained by high labour supervision and monitoring costs

Page 4: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Outline of presentation

• Explore how three groups of stakeholders in the South Indian industry meet (changing) quality requirements in new and existing markets

• Exporters – export destinations, quality requirements and sourcing strategies

• Bought leaf factories – product differentiation and sourcing strategies

• Small tea growers’ conformity to quality requirements

Page 5: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Background - the south Indian tea sector

• Approximately 50% of India’s tea exports come from South India.

• Approximately 65,000 small tea growers contribute to around 50% of South Indian tea production.

• 60-80% of Nilgiris’ production was exported to the Soviet bloc from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s

• Demand: low-quality bulk teas, but relatively high returns for these sales.

• 1990s: Expansion of tea production by small growers and rapid growth of Bought Leaf Factories

• 1998/99 – a sharp decline in exports to Russia and CIS countries combined with declining global tea prices affected the sector detrimentally

Page 6: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Production of tea in South India

Production of tea in South India, CTC and Orthodox, 1961-2006

0

50

100

150

200

250

Year

Mil

lio

n k

g

CTC

Orthodox

Page 7: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Export companies

• Tea estates• Bulk tea and between 70 and 100% exported directly to

buyers in Europe (branded tea manufacturers)• The quality of green leaf itself and method of processing

are significant to the branded tea manufacturers• Selective plucking methods implemented• Orthodox tea production (converted or increased

production)• Third-party certification (ISO 9000 series of quality

management and compliance to food safety HACCP procedures)

Page 8: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Export companies (cont.)

• Group of blending companies:• Main export countries: Russia, Ukraine (CIS),

Kazakhstan, Poland (60-70%)• Export of Orthodox and CTC teas (bulk, blended form)• Packing facilities in consuming countries, several

entered the packed tea market • Secondary export countries: Australia, EU, USA, Japan –

bulk, blended form (30-40%)• Third-part certification (ISO 9000 series of quality

management and compliance to food safety HACCP procedures)

• Group of blending companies:• Main export countries: Iraq, Pakistan, Kenya, Russia• Bulk export - CTC blends (low unit price)• None certified against e.g. ISO 9000

Page 9: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Sourcing strategies

• Blenders exporting to higher quality segments (including packed tea segments) in Russia, CIS, Europe, Japan, Australia: 50-60% from auction centres while 40-50% purchased directly from few tea estates (orthodox tea)

• Blenders exporting to lower quality segments in the Middle East, West Asia, Africa (Kenya): 70-80% from auction centres, 30-20% procured directly from tea estates (orthodox and CTC) and BLFs (CTC)

• Import of tea for re-export: Vietnam, Kenya, Nepal, Indonesia

• Average unit import price: 50 Rs/kg (34.23 Rs/kg Vietnamese tea) – Average unit price, auction centres: price 66 Rs per kg

Page 10: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Quality differentiation and sourcing strategies by BLF

• Dual processing lines (coarse and fine leaf) - 1 to 4 different qualities

• BLFs with own tea gardens – supplement with green leaf sourced from small tea growers

• Price differential at the auction centre between very fine quality and standard quality of 20-30 Rs/kg ($0,66)

• Sourcing strategy: • Re-definition of quality standard (two/three leaves and a bud)

and price incentives • Scaled down purchasing through agents, focus on fewer

growers and purchase from Quality Tea procurement and Service Centres run by women’s self help groups

• However, most of the BLFs focused on volume, not quality

Page 11: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Small tea growers’ conformity to quality requirements?

• Tea production highly labour-intensive: • Fine leaf standard (two leaves and a bud) –

plucking rounds should be maintained at around 10 days requires more labour at the same time as the cost of labour increases during the peak season

• Lack of sufficient price premium attached to higher quality leaf: • Fine leaf: 20-25 kg per day • Sub-standard/standard leaf: 40 kg per day• Return - fine leaf: 200-250 Rs per working day

Return on standard: 320 Rs per working day• Green leaf prices are characterised by intra-

seasonal variations Focus on quantity instead of quality during peak

season

Page 12: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Concluding remarks

1) A tendency to move away from spot market transactions to other forms of vertical coordination between producers and processors in order to ensure a sufficient supply of high(er) quality teas (branded tea manufacturers, tea estates, blenders and the interface between BLFs and small growers) – quality requirements in different markets

2) The ‘tea market’ is highly segmented. Differences in unit prices between markets and market segments, but there is always a market – even for poor quality tea

3) Improvement in quality management practices by small tea growers is of great importance• Major constraints: high labour supervision and monitoring

costs and a market system which rewards quantity of output and tolerates deficiencies in output quality

Page 13: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Critical issues that require further analysis:

• Emerging markets in Asia and the Middle East may introduce new export opportunities - but it is uncertain whether these markets offer higher returns compared with existing markets (small tea growers and BLFs)

reward structures of conforming to different quality requirements in different markets need to be analysed.

• Farm-level costs and benefits of conforming to different quality grades and how these relate to farm scale and marketing channel need to be invested based on an analysis of the small tea grower survey

Page 14: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Unit export prices (selected countries), 2006

Unit export prices (Rs per kg), 2006

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

Russ

ia

Kaza

khst

an

Ukra

ine

Uzbe

kist

an

Oth

er C

IS

Unite

d Ki

ngdo

m

Neth

erla

nds

Ger

man

y

Irela

nd

Pola

nd

USA

Cana

da UAE

Iran

Iraq

Saud

i Ara

bia AR

E

Turk

ey

Afgh

anis

tan

Sing

apor

e

Sri L

anka

Keny

a

Japa

n

Paki

stan

Aust

ralia

Oth

er c

ount

ries

Countries

Rs p

er k

g

Page 15: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Export of Tea, 2006

Export of tea from India (million kg), 2006

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Rus

sia

Kaz

akhs

tan

Ukr

aine

Uzb

ekis

tan

Oth

er C

IS

Uni

ted

Kin

gdom

Net

herla

nds

Ger

man

y

Irela

nd

Pol

and

US

A

Can

ada

UA

E

Iran

Iraq

Sau

di A

rabi

a

AR

E

Turk

ey

Afg

hani

stan

Sin

gapo

re

Sri

Lank

a

Ken

ya

Japa

n

Pak

ista

n

Aus

tralia

Oth

er c

ount

ries

Countries

Mill

ion

kg

Page 16: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Page 17: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Page 18: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Page 19: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Page 20: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Institutional – regulatory framework

Tea board of India:

• Launched ‘Quality Upgradation Programme’ (2000) – subsidies • CTC / Orthodox tea• Upgrading of processing methods (BLFs)• Improvement in husbandry practices

• Tea Marketing Control Order (2001) – sale of tea through any marketing channel

• Liberalisation – duty free import of tea (re-export)

Page 21: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Auction prices, 1995-2006

Auction prices (US cents/kg), 1995-2006

0

50

100

150

200

250

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Year

US c

ents

/kg

South India

North India

Sri Lanka

Kenya

Page 22: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Page 23: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Quality of tea and quality standards (cont.)

• Tea available at the consumer levels in blended form or defined by geographical indicator (pure Assam, Darjeeling)

• Private quality standards set by blending companies / tea manufacturers (though compliance to (voluntary and mandatory) quality and food safety procedures is important

• Blending according to specific domestic/regional preferences ‘quality by design’ and information on quality embedded in brands (OECD countries)

• A blend consist of different grades, quality attributes and methods of processing

• High degree of inter-substitution and flexibility in blending formulas

Page 24: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

What defines the quality of tea and quality standards

• The quality of tea is made in the field and only preserved in the factory (two leaves and a bud)

• Quality differentiated according to grade, processing methods and quality attributes

• Auction and private sale: Tea is sold on the garden mark and grade – prices vary considerably between grades.

Page 25: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Main objectives of the project

How quality standards in different end-markets affect terms and conditions for market access for developing countries’ tea products.

• To examine the scope and nature of salient quality standards in European and Developing Asian markets and how quality is financial rewarded in these markets

• To analyse the distributional effects of conformity to quality standards amongst developing countries and different groups of actors within a country

• To identify what national and local institutional conditions are important in achieving improved conformity with quality standards

Page 26: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Exporting countries

Major tea exporting countries

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Year

Mil

lio

n k

g

Sri Lanka

Kenya

China

India

Vietnam

Indonesia

Argentina

Malawi

Tanzania

Zimbabwe

Others

Page 27: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Import – major regions

Import of tea (regions)

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Year

Mil

lio

n k

g

EU

Other West Europe

East Europe

America

West Asia

Asia other than West

North Africa

Africa other than North

Oceania

Page 28: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

CTC and Orthodox tea – average unit prices

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Year

Rs/

kg CTC

Orthodox

Page 29: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Intra-seasonal variation in prices

Green leaf prices (BLF)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

Months

Rs

per

kg

Standard leaf

Fine leaf

Page 30: Conformity to Quality Standards in International Tea Markets The Case of South Indian tea Marianne Nylandsted Larsen

Department of Geography & Geology

Total quantity sold at auctions and total production (million kgs) in South India, 1991-2006

0

50

100

150

200

250

Year

Mill

ion

kg

s

Cochin

Coonoor

Coimbatore

Total quantity sold atauctions

Total production, South India