Kahawatte Plantation scores top 33 tea prices and makes rebound in production

Thursday, 1 July 2021 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reopening of Wellanduara and Poronuwa tea factories by KWPL Chief Operating Strategist Dr. Dan Seevaratnam

 


At the recently concluded Colombo Tea Auctions held in May, Craighead, Kataboola, Queensberry, Galamuduna and Rilhena Estates managed by Kahawatte Plantations PLC (KWPL) obtained 33 of the top prices for a range of tea grades. Beyond its success in tea, the plantations also note an increase in demand for its rubber which in turn has attributed to the Plantations’ steady performance from January to May.

Amidst its success, the plantation community in the Wellanduara and Poronuwa vicinity celebrate the reopening of its tea factories, after being closed for some time. During the first month since its opening the factory in Poronuwa, concluded with a commendable sale, with an average of Rs. 692. 

Furthermore, the factory has provided employment to over 50 previously unemployed individuals with a further chain of indirect employment being created within the communities around the plantation and accommodates green leaf from smallholders within the estate regions. 

The initiatives such as these capacities improvements and cost reduction initiatives in tea enabled the company to improve its gross profit from the tea segment in 2021 Q1 to Rs. 103.5 million while total KWPL gross profits rose to Rs. 132 million due to similar initiatives in rubber.

When the rubber hit the road due to the effects of the pandemic in the last quarter of 2020, Sri Lanka’s raw rubber prices, which remained depressed for many years, saw a rebound due to import controls in place for rubber-based products, enhancing prospects for plantation companies and smallholders alike. In addition to this benefit, KWPL was able to increase the rubber harvest up to 1.15 million kg, 0.18 million kg more than the previous season due to favourable weather conditions 

Kahawatte Plantations is the producer of some of the best-selling tea in Sri Lanka, delivered from its mid-country belt of plantations, laid across the central hills above Kandy and reaching up to the foothills of the Dimbula range, combined with its holdings in the fertile lowlands of the Sabaragamuwa Province. In particular, the Imboolpitiya, Craighead, Kataboola, Endane and Rilhena estates have been granted the ISO 22000: 2018 certification meeting the requirements of manufacturing systems whilst  Wellandura and Houpe estates, too, would have ISO 22000:2018 completed in Q-3. 

KWPL is around 12,000 hectares in total, with six operating tea processing centres in the Nawalapitiya, seven operating in Sabaragamuwa while another will be commissioned before the end of Q2, and four operational rubber factories and four Cinnamon processing centres. The company has produced over 4 million kg of tea historically, and 2021 to date results and Q2/Q3 plans envisage an increase of tea and rubber production by the end of 2021.

 

KWPL was able to increase the rubber harvest up to 1.15 m kg, up 0.18 m kg from previous season

 

KWPL Queensberry Estate


 

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