Tea prices continue moving skyward

Strong consumer demand and unusual climatic conditions in some of the major tea producing countries have pushed tea prices at auction centres around the world to the highest levels in decades. Between January and December 1997 the world's main auction centres saw the price of tea rise into high double digits: in Calcutta, India +69%; Mombassa, Kenya +43.2%; Blantyre, Malawi +74.6% and Colombo, Sri Lanka +53.8%. The rising price trend is expected to continue at least until the end of 1998.

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Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: News Item biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 1998
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/48193
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99634
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-481932021-02-24T08:14:21Z Tea prices continue moving skyward Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Strong consumer demand and unusual climatic conditions in some of the major tea producing countries have pushed tea prices at auction centres around the world to the highest levels in decades. Between January and December 1997 the world's main auction centres saw the price of tea rise into high double digits: in Calcutta, India +69%; Mombassa, Kenya +43.2%; Blantyre, Malawi +74.6% and Colombo, Sri Lanka +53.8%. The rising price trend is expected to continue at least until the end of 1998. Strong consumer demand and unusual climatic conditions in some of the major tea producing countries have pushed tea prices at auction centres around the world to the highest levels in decades. Between January and December 1997 the world's main... 1998 2014-10-16T09:14:06Z 2014-10-16T09:14:06Z News Item CTA. 1998. Tea prices continue moving skyward. Spore 77. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands. 1011-0054 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/48193 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99634 en Spore Open Access Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Spore
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
countrycode FR
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tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
description Strong consumer demand and unusual climatic conditions in some of the major tea producing countries have pushed tea prices at auction centres around the world to the highest levels in decades. Between January and December 1997 the world's main auction centres saw the price of tea rise into high double digits: in Calcutta, India +69%; Mombassa, Kenya +43.2%; Blantyre, Malawi +74.6% and Colombo, Sri Lanka +53.8%. The rising price trend is expected to continue at least until the end of 1998.
format News Item
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Tea prices continue moving skyward
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title Tea prices continue moving skyward
title_short Tea prices continue moving skyward
title_full Tea prices continue moving skyward
title_fullStr Tea prices continue moving skyward
title_full_unstemmed Tea prices continue moving skyward
title_sort tea prices continue moving skyward
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 1998
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/48193
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99634
work_keys_str_mv AT technicalcentreforagriculturalandruralcooperation teapricescontinuemovingskyward
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