Gujarat tea buyers team visits State
Staff Reporter
 GUWAHATI,
 April 23 – A 34-member team of tea buyers from Gujarat, led by the 
Ahmedabad Tea Merchants’ Association, has arrived in the State on a 
seven-day visit since April 20. The team will visit the tea plantation, tea 
factories and interact with the stakeholders to know the process of tea 
production.
This team will try to understand the tea industry and the process of making 
quality tea from the buyers’ point of view.During
 the visit, the team members comprising packeteers, retailers, 
semi-wholesalers, wholesalers, auction buyers and commission agents, 
will visit some of the tea estates of Dibrugarh, Sivasagar and the 
Guwahati Tea Auction Centre (GTAC). They
 have already visited some of the tea estates of Jorhat district, 
Tocklai Experimental Station and a tea estate in Karbi Anglong district 
and a bought leaf factory in Golaghat district.The
 visit has been described by the tea industry sources here as an 
important event in the history of the State’s tea industry. For Gujarat 
is known for the quality tea it procures. Gujarat has been procuring, on
 an average, 60 per cent of the good quality tea sold in the GTAC. It
 procures around 50 million kilograms (kgs) of Assam tea in a year and 
this constitutes around 12 per cent of the total tea produced in the 
Brahmaputra Valley of the State in a year. This western State has 
emerged as the third highest tea consuming State of the country and it 
has recorded a per capita consumption of 1.4 kgs, against the national 
average of 750 grams, said the sources.According
 to tea industry sources, the Gujarat traders took part in an 
interactive meeting with the 60 tea producers and sellers belonging to 
Karbi Anglong, Golaghat, Jorhat and Sivasagar districts yesterday at the
 Golaghat office of the North Eastern Tea Association (NETA). It
 needs mention here that the tea produced in Golaghat district is 
considered to be the best in the world. The district, along with its 
adjacent Jorhat and Karbi Anglong districts, is endowed with a good 
climatic and soil condition. There is a saying that one can’t make bad 
tea in the Golaghat belt.Actively
 taking part in the interactive meet, president of the Ahmedabad Tea 
Merchants’ Association HP Agarwal, its secretary Tejal Shah, advisor 
Ashok Relia and other members said that they were amazed to see tea 
plantations in a difficult terrain of Karbi Anglong and the amount of 
hard work put by the tea planters to manufacture quality tea.The
 seller members of the NETA tried to impress upon the Gujarat buyers 
that the bought leaf factories also produce equally good tea at par with
 the estate factories and there should not be any misgiving that the 
bought leaf factories produce bad tea. The buyers should not be guided 
by a pre-conceived idea about the quality of the tea at the time of 
making the buying bids, the NETA seller members said.NETA
 chairman Bidyananda Barkakoty, who presided over the Golaghat 
interactive session, described the day as a red letter day for tea trade
 in Assam and the State’s tea industry as a whole. HP
 Agarwal told this newspaper that the members of the team, which has 
been visiting the State, have found Golaghat and Karbi Anglong tea very 
interesting. For, the tea planters here have been putting on a lot of 
hard work to produce quality tea despite their plantations and factories
 being located at interior places. The
 visitors from Gujarat will also visit tea brokers firm J Thomas located
 in Guwahati and will take part in an interaction with the stakeholders 
of the GTAC. They will also visit the tea warehouses located in the 
city, said the sources.

( The Assam Tribune , 24.04.2011)
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