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Workers pick purple tea leaves at the Gatura Greens purple tea plantation in Gatura settlement of Muranga, Kenya.
Workers at a tea plantation in Muranga, Kenya – the country produces half of all the tea consumed in the UK. Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters
Workers at a tea plantation in Muranga, Kenya – the country produces half of all the tea consumed in the UK. Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters

Tea-growing areas to be badly hit if global heating intensifies

This article is more than 2 years old

In Kenya, the area of optimal tea-growing conditions will be reduced by more than a quarter by 2050

Your morning cup of tea may never taste the same again if global heating increases and the climate crisis intensifies, according to research.

Some of the world’s biggest tea-growing areas will be among the worst hit by extreme weather, and their yields are likely to be vastly reduced in the coming decades if climate breakdown continues at its current pace. Floods, droughts, heatwaves and storms are likely to have a severe impact on tea-growing areas around the world, according to a report from the charity Christian Aid.

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In Kenya, which produces close to half of all the tea consumed in the UK, the area of optimal tea-growing conditions will be reduced by more than a quarter by 2050, while about 39% of areas with medium-quality growing conditions are facing destruction, according to the report.

Even before tea plantations are wiped out, however, tea drinkers may notice changes on their palate: the impacts of flooding and the increased rainfall forecast in many tea regions will be to change the subtle flavours of the tea leaf, and potentially reduce its health benefits.

Waterlogging can prevent the ecological cues that cause the plant to release chemicals that enhance the flavour of tea, and that create its antioxidant properties, prized as a potential health benefit by tea drinkers. These aromatic compounds, called secondary metabolites – which may also help boost the immune system and have anti-inflammatory properties – are also diluted when the plant receives too much water, resulting in leaves of lower quality and less tasty tea.

Kat Kramer, climate policy lead at Christian Aid, said: “You will lose the delicate nuances of flavour, the things that make tea so special. It’s like taking the herbs and spices away from a recipe – you will not get the same richness of flavour.”

Women harvesting organic tea in the district of Darjeeling in West Bengal in India. Photograph: Getty Images

Tea-growing areas in India, China and Sri Lanka are also likely to be affected, according to the report. Tea is also a major employer, with more than 3 million people in the sector in Africa alone, but tea farmers interviewed for the research reported that many young people were seeking alternatives to tea plantations, worried about the future.

Richard Koskei, 72, a tea farmer from Kericho in the western highlands of Kenya, told the researchers: “For generations we have carefully cultivated our tea farms, and we are proud that the tea we grow here is the best in the world. But climate change poses a real threat to us. We cannot predict seasons any more, temperatures are rising, rainfall is more erratic, more often accompanied by unusual hailstones and longer droughts, which was not the case in the past.”

The UK imported 126,000 tonnes of tea in 2017, of which 62,000 tonnes came from Kenya, the world’s biggest exporter of black tea.

Christian Aid is calling for Boris Johnson to forge a deal that would strengthen global greenhouse gas emissions, at the Cop26 climate summit to be hosted in Glasgow this November. The charity also wants rich countries to provide poor regions with financial assistance to help them cope with the impacts of climate breakdown and extreme weather.

More on this story

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