Tea Biz

Dan Bolton

The Voice of Tea Lands | Tea Journey Magazine, founded in 2015, and the Tea Biz Blog | Podcast are favorites of tea enthusiasts and professionals worldwide. Content is authentic, timely, and exclusive, a collaborative effort that enlists 40 voices skilled in 12 languages to tell the story of tea. Coverage spans tea discovery and preparation to tea tourism, lifestyles, health and wellness, meditation, culinary tea with recipes, and terroir. Our business coverage offers insights for commercial producers supported by rich market data and scientifically backed research. Transparency is rooted in authentic storytelling, featuring nuanced articles about the places and people who passionately live a life in tea. As a niche publication, Tea Journey relies on reader contributions for most of its income. Please consider donating to support the writers and staff who bring you our unique tea content from around the globe. We appreciate your support. In 2025, we teamed up with our good friends at OverSubscribe, a platform that lets our fans make real financial investments in our future. By contributing as little as $25 to Tea Journey, you’re not just supporting our publication—you’re joining a lively global community and earning a return on your investment. | https://teajourney.oversub.me/

  1. Tea Price Report | Week 7 | Ending 13 February 2026

    HACE 5 DÍAS

    Tea Price Report | Week 7 | Ending 13 February 2026

    Tea Price Report | Episode 234 | Week 7 | Ending 13 February 2026 | Tea markets closed ISO Week 7 with a steadier tone as buyers continued to prioritize near-term cover and invoice certainty over forward risk, but showed slightly more willingness to compete when seasonal leaf and clean manufacture were evident. Across origins, demand remained decisively quality-led: well-made teas cleared consistently, average descriptions met selective enquiry, and plainer invoices faced widening resistance, reinforcing dispersion within catalogues rather than uniform strength. Buyer participation remained concentrated, with fewer hands setting the clearing level across several catalogues, leaving secondary lines to trade unevenly, especially where liquidity grades dominated offerings. Exporter discipline persisted, supported by currency dynamics and elevated input costs, which limited the willingness to accept discounts and kept price floors intact even where demand for off-grades softened. In Colombo, the early-season uplift in select high-grown and bright liquoring teas continued to anchor sentiment, while low-grown segments remained more invoice-specific and sensitive to buyer replacement alternatives. Prices averaged USD 3.14/kg (Week 7) | USD 3.15/kg (prior week) In North India, Assam liquidity grades continued to function as the price-setting mechanism, with buying largely contractual and execution-driven rather than speculative. Prices averaged USD 2.01/kg (Week 7) | USD 2.02/kg (prior week) In East Africa, competitive bidding concentrated around proven BP1/PF1 and clean dusts, while plainer lots saw wider bid-ask gaps, consistent with a market that is clearing volume but rewarding specification. Prices averaged USD 2.22/kg (Week 7) | USD 2.21/kg (prior week) Auction pricing in Indonesia remained secondary to contract and direct sales activity, with selective interest focused on specialty lots and improvement teas. Where spot buying did appear, it was disciplined and specification-led rather than broad-based. Prices averaged USD 1.19/kg (Week 7) | USD 1.18/kg (prior week) Overall, headline averages again masked the real signal: the spread between “must-own” teas and undifferentiated teas widened, and that dispersion is increasingly the durable feature of price discovery. | This week’s Tea Price Report is sponsored by the East Africa Tea Trade Association (EATTA), owners of the Mombasa Tea Auction since 1956. | Podlink signup: https://pod.link/1549975153 Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tea-biz/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    4 min
  2. Spotlight | FarmerPower.ai

    HACE 5 DÍAS

    Spotlight | FarmerPower.ai

    Seventy-eight percent of Kenya’s 720,000 tea smallholders cultivate half an acre or less. Tea anchors rural income, supports millions of jobs, and remains one of the country’s most important export sectors. Yet at the farmgate, quality is largely assessed after processing—when value has already been diluted. Most growers deliver green leaf with little real-time feedback, limited visibility into downgrading, and minimal transparency into how their harvest performs once it enters the factory. Today, we spotlight Sein Star Kilel, CEO and Co-Founder of FarmerPower.ai, a Nairobi-based ag-tech startup building AI-powered intake infrastructure designed to address that structural gap. FarmerPower.ai integrates computer vision, machine learning, and conveyor-based sorting hardware to classify green leaf at intake. Each batch is barcoded and linked to the farmer. The system evaluates measurable attributes—leaf count, moisture, size, and structural integrity—using a proprietary model that reports 93% classification accuracy. Primary and secondary leaf are separated before processing, preserving premium yield potential rather than averaging it away. The objective is economic as much as technical: reduce downgrading, increase premium yield ratios, align incentives at intake, and convert quality into measurable data. Raised in a tea-growing family, Kilel understands the cost of information asymmetry. FarmerPower.ai is currently in prototype development and early-stage fundraising, exploring a leasing model for hardware paired with recurring software and data services. If scalable, the platform positions itself not as a brand, but as infrastructure—shifting quality accountability upstream and reshaping how Kenyan tea is measured, priced, and monetized. | BIO: Sein Star Kilel was raised in a family of tea growers and brings firsthand insight into the structural information gaps that affect smallholder income—particularly the absence of real-time quality measurement at intake. She holds a postgraduate degree in AI and Machine Learning from Caltech and a master’s degree in Sustainability, Innovation, and Technology from Tomorrow University. Sayn is co-founder of FarmerPower.ai, an intake-level quality and traceability platform combining AI-driven leaf classification (93% reported accuracy), barcode-linked batch tracking, and hardware-based sorting to separate primary and secondary leaf before processing. The company is developing a factory-leasing model with recurring software services, positioning FarmerPower.ai as a scalable quality infrastructure for origin markets. The startup is currently in prototype deployment and fundraising stages.| Podlink signup: https://pod.link/1549975153 Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tea-biz/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    9 min
  3. Ep 234 | China Sets $216B Tea Goal | Bangladesh-India Reset | Dementia and Tea

    HACE 5 DÍAS

    Ep 234 | China Sets $216B Tea Goal | Bangladesh-India Reset | Dementia and Tea

    China Sets $216 Billion Tea Industry Chain Target for 2030 | India–Bangladesh Political Reset Signals Smoother Trade, Auctions and Transport for Tea | Dementia Risk Study Coverage Strengthens Tea’s Moderate-Consumption Demand Narrative NEWSMAKER – Sein Star Kilel, CEO Co-Founder, FarmerPower.ai PLUS | FarmerPower.ai | Seventy-eight percent of the 720,000 Kenyan smallholders who rely on tea for their livelihoods cultivate tea on plots of a half-acre or less. The sector is crucial to the economy, providing jobs for millions and contributing significantly to the country's GDP. Yet most farmers operate in the dark, receiving little to no real-time feedback on leaf quality, pricing outcomes, or how their harvest performs at factory intake. Today, we speak with Sein Star Kilel, co-founder of FarmerPower.ai, a Nairobi-based startup developing computer vision and AI tools to improve green leaf quality at the point of intake. By combining barcode traceability, conveyor-based sorting hardware, and a proprietary AI model trained to classify primary versus secondary leaf, FarmerPower.ai aims to reduce downgrading, increase premium yield, and provide real-time feedback to farmers. If successful, the platform could reshape how quality is measured, rewarded, and monetized in Kenyan tea.| Podlink signup: https://pod.link/1549975153 Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tea-biz/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    29 min
  4. Tea Price Report | Week 5 | Ending 30 January 2026

    6 FEB

    Tea Price Report | Week 5 | Ending 30 January 2026

    Week 5 tea markets closed on a steady-to-selective note as buyers continued to prioritize prompt coverage rather than extending forward positions. Overall, price discovery remained firmly quality-led, underscoring that invoice-level differentiation—not headline averages—continues to define current market outcomes. | In Colombo (Sri Lanka) | Demand was fair to good for featured leaf grades, with selective bidding for secondary descriptions. Exporter offerings remained disciplined, reinforcing quality-led clearance across high- and mid-grown catalogues. Prices averaged USD 3.15/kg (Week 5) | DOWN FROM USD 3.17/kg (Week 4). In Kolkata / North India | Buying activity remained largely functional and contract-driven, with limited speculative participation. Assam CTC liquidity grades continued to anchor price discovery, while plainer teas saw softer realizations. Prices averaged USD 2.02/kg (Week 5) | DOWN FROM USD 2.06/kg (Week 4). In Mombasa (East Africa) | Buyer participation remained broad, with competition intensifying for quality invoices. Large volumes cleared with wide intra-sale dispersion, reflecting selective bidding rather than generalized strength. Prices averaged USD 2.21/kg (Week 5) | UP FROM USD 2.17/kg (Week 4) Indonesia | Auction activity remained secondary to direct sales, with selective interest in specialty and improvement lots. Pricing reflected cautious, contract-led demand rather than spot-driven buying behavior. Prices averaged USD 1.18/kg (Week 5) | DOWN FROM USD 1.24/kg (Week 4). | Podlink signup: https://pod.link/1549975153 Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tea-biz/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    3 min
  5. Spotlight | Chalu: Bringing the Tea Road to the Modern Table

    6 FEB

    Spotlight | Chalu: Bringing the Tea Road to the Modern Table

    In this SPOTLIGHT conversation, Fraser Kennedy shares the story behind Chalu, a Yunnan-based tea brand built on a simple yet demanding principle: let the tea speak. From cold-brewing single-origin teas to layering structure with local Yunnan oak, natural carbonation, and minimal intervention, Kennedy explains how Chalu was designed not as a flavored beverage but as a tea-forward alternative to wine—crafted for restaurants navigating the global shift toward low- and no-alcohol menus. Grounded in Yunnan’s geography, history, and the ancient Tea Road itself, this discussion connects innovation with restraint, showing how respect for origin, process, and flavor can create a new drinking occasion—without compromising what makes tea, tea. | BIO | Originally trained as a brewer, Fraser Kennedy brings a deep understanding of fermentation, structure, and mouthfeel to tea—applying brewing discipline to preserve, rather than mask, tea’s natural character. After relocating to Yunnan in the early 2010s, he immersed himself in the region’s tea landscapes and traditions, developing a mission to share Yunnan’s flavor with the world. Chalu—named for the ancient Tea Road—cold-brews single-origin teas sourced directly from producers, finishing them with minimal, locally rooted elements to create a structured,wine-adjacent tea experience suitable for Michelin-level tables. Kennedy’s work sits at the intersection of tea tradition and contemporary beverage innovation, reflecting a broader shift toward authenticity, provenance, and tea-first thinking in global RTD and hospitality markets. | Podlink signup: https://pod.link/1549975153 Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tea-biz/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    23 min

Acerca de

The Voice of Tea Lands | Tea Journey Magazine, founded in 2015, and the Tea Biz Blog | Podcast are favorites of tea enthusiasts and professionals worldwide. Content is authentic, timely, and exclusive, a collaborative effort that enlists 40 voices skilled in 12 languages to tell the story of tea. Coverage spans tea discovery and preparation to tea tourism, lifestyles, health and wellness, meditation, culinary tea with recipes, and terroir. Our business coverage offers insights for commercial producers supported by rich market data and scientifically backed research. Transparency is rooted in authentic storytelling, featuring nuanced articles about the places and people who passionately live a life in tea. As a niche publication, Tea Journey relies on reader contributions for most of its income. Please consider donating to support the writers and staff who bring you our unique tea content from around the globe. We appreciate your support. In 2025, we teamed up with our good friends at OverSubscribe, a platform that lets our fans make real financial investments in our future. By contributing as little as $25 to Tea Journey, you’re not just supporting our publication—you’re joining a lively global community and earning a return on your investment. | https://teajourney.oversub.me/