Sharp Daily
No Result
View All Result
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team
Sharp Daily
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team
No Result
View All Result
Sharp Daily
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Tea farmers score big with KTDA’s record KES 44 billion payout

Editor SharpDaily by Editor SharpDaily
September 29, 2023
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Kenya’s smallholder tea farmers are set for a record payout of KES 44.15 billion for their supplies in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2023, giving the agriculture sector a positive jolt.

The Kenya Tea Development Agency (KTDA), which represents about 600,000 farmers at 54 factories, plans to distribute the bonus over the next two weeks. It comes as the farmers also receive payments for tea supplied this month.

The payout will boost total earnings for farmers in the year by 7.6% to a new high of KES 67.7 billion, compared with 62.89 billion shillings at the same period last year. Improved tea prices on international markets, where the average selling price climbed 9.6% to 341 shillings per kilogram, drove the earnings growth.

Read more: Navigating Bull and Bear Markets: A guide to sustainable investing in Kenya

RELATEDPOSTS

KTDA to set minimum quality standards for tea in global market push

September 14, 2024

Tea prices drop as Kenyan production surges by 17%

August 30, 2024

Farmers will receive an average KES 59.02 for every kilogram of green leaf sold, a 17.6% jump from KES 50.18 last year.

Despite challenges like drought, farmers in Kericho and Bomet counties stand to get the largest share of KES 16.1 billion because they supplied 305.4 million kilograms of tea in the cycle. Factories in Kapkoros, Tirgaga, Olenguruone and Motigo will pay out approximately kes 4.9 billion, the highest subregional figure.

Production declines hit regions unevenly. Output slid 15.2% in Kiambu county and 14.3% in Kericho and Bomet, while falling 8.5% in Kisii and Nyamira counties.

Experts cite increased sales volume, cost management and favorable foreign exchange rates for the record payout. Sales of orthodox tea leapt to 10 million kilograms from 3 million kilograms.

Read more: Financial firms rapidly adopt AI despite looming risks

But the earnings jump happened despite a 9% drop in green leaf production to 1.145 billion kilograms, the lowest since 2019.

Adverse weather like drought cut tea production to 535,000 metric tons from 537,800 metric tons in 2021.

The record payments show the resilience of smallholder farmers facing challenges like climate change. Reforms like guaranteed minimum prices at auction have helped, as has the exchange rate.

More government and stakeholder collaboration is needed to ensure sustainable growth in this critical economic sector. The payout offers hope for Kenya’s agriculture.

Email your news TIPS to editor@thesharpdaily.com

Previous Post

Financial firms rapidly adopt AI despite looming risks

Next Post

National Construction Authority retains Akech as executive director

Editor SharpDaily

Editor SharpDaily

The latest in business, real estate, education, investments, tech and entrepreneurship, brought to you daily. Reach us through thesharpdaily@gmail.com

Related Posts

News

Start Q4 strong with the Cytonn Money Market Fund

October 9, 2025
News

Kenya Q2’ 2025 GDP growth accelerates to 5.0%

October 3, 2025
News

Argentina’s crisis and Kenya’s lessons on political economy and market confidence

September 25, 2025
News

Kenya’s financial system remains stable but faces rising risks

September 25, 2025
News

Where do Kenyan stock returns come from? A napkin framework

September 19, 2025
News

September snapshot: CMMF yields 13.12% as month unfolds

September 5, 2025

LATEST STORIES

Compliance training is emerging as the cheapest form of risk control

October 22, 2025

CBK boosts gold reserves by 40.8% to strengthen Kenya’s financial stability

October 22, 2025

Kenya Re to gain bigger market share under new treasury regulations

October 22, 2025

Understanding stablecoins: The backbone of digital finance

October 22, 2025

The Challenge of Preserving Retirement Savings in Kenya

October 16, 2025

Understanding Segregated vs Guaranteed Pension Schemes

October 16, 2025

The Sanlam-Jubilee deal

October 16, 2025

Kenya’s industrial real estate awakening

October 16, 2025
  • About Us
  • Meet The Team
  • Careers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Email us: editor@thesharpdaily.com

Sharp Daily © 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team

Sharp Daily © 2024