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PS directs Kenya Tea Board to audit private tea factories

PS Ronoh questioned the quality of tea produced by certain private tea factories

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by KNA

Counties22 October 2024 - 14:45

In Summary


  • The PS asked the Kenya Tea Board not to register new tea factories but to audit existing ones for quality production and ensure complaints raised by farmers are addressed without delay.
  • He said the competitiveness of Kenyan tea on the world market is majorly dependent on the quality of tea processed by certified tea factories.


Agriculture Principal Secretary Paul Ronoh has directed the Kenya Tea Board to audit all existing private tea factories to ensure the attainment of minimum standards in the production and processing of tea.

Ronoh lauded Kenya Tea Development Authority factories for ensuring the highest quality of Kenyan tea is achieved and suitable for the local and international markets.

He questioned the quality of tea produced by certain private tea factories which he claimed has ruined the quality of Kenyan tea on the world market.

“If KTDA factories comply with accepted tea production and processing standards other private tea firms are violating the rules and this must stop,” Ronoh said when he visited KTDA factories of Chebut and Kaptumo.

The PS asked the Kenya Tea Board not to register new tea factories but to audit existing ones for quality production and ensure complaints raised by farmers are addressed without delay.

He said the competitiveness of Kenyan tea on the world market is majorly dependent on the quality of tea processed by certified tea factories.

Ronoh expressed confidence that KTDA factories are producing the best tea and urged the private tea firms to comply with government-approved standards.

He said the Kenya Tea Board, a tea sector regulatory body, should use its powers to ensure farmers get value for their investments and also strict adherence to tea farming and processing guidelines for quality tea.

“I am happy to report that KTDA factories are established on agreed and regulated cost without exaggeration of figures,” he said.

The PS said the government had settled on Sh2,500 as the cost of a 50-kg bag of tea fertilizer asking farmers not to pay more.

According to him, the government is keen on producing quality tea that is competitive on the world market and was the reason farmers are being given affordable fertilizer for tea production to meet international standards.

“Our tea factories should always keep their production standards high even as we ensure tea farmers, just like maize farmers, get affordable fertilizer to boost their production,” he said.

Ronoh said the government remains committed to ensuring maize farmers continue to benefit from affordable fertilizer and that close to one million bags had been procured.

The Agriculture PS spoke when he visited tea farmers and management of Chebut and Kaptumo tea factories in Emgwen and Aldai constituencies respectively to assess the proposal of separating Kaptumo from Chebut Tea Company.

He approved the separation but called for the requisite legal process to be strictly adhered to.


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