The China Tea Marketing Association (CTMA)
The China Tea Marketing Association (CTMA) was found in 1992
The China Tea Marketing Association (CTMA) was found in 1992
Tamil woman plucking tea leaves near Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka (Ceylon). (Getty Images/hadynyah)
The Asian Tea Alliance (ATA) in a memorandum of understanding (MOU), an agreement to act rather than a formal plan, between the main industry and policy organizations in five tea-growing countries: Indian Tea Association, China Tea Marketing Association, Indonesian Tea Marketing Association, Sri Lanka Tea Board and Japan Tea Association. It is representative of the trend towards co-opetition as critical to the future of tea growing in an era of climate change, global overcapacity, disappearing operating profit margins, and labor and social turmoil.
Co-opetition can be summarized as “Collaborate in the morning so you can compete in the afternoon.” It’s very different from a cartel—cooperate so we can stop outsiders competing—or a NAFTA-like trade treaty. It is a formal group publicly committed to working together on a specific area where the collaborative gains outweigh individual advantage.
The BBC summarizes the issue as “” and points to how the largest “tea companies are laying to one side their competitive instincts to protect the long-term future of their business” through transparency and authentication, Fair Trade, Rainforest-UTZ, the Ethical Tea Partnership, and supplier identification. ATA works from the other end of the value chain.
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The viability and impact of ATA is unclear. It is an MOU only. It may drift, lack financial and organizational resources or not be a priority for national policy makers and industry leaders. But it is part of a growing trend away from “Go it alone” to “We can only work on this together, “This” is the future of the tea industry. And ATA is the largest force in trading.
Here are rankings of the top ten countries in tea (millions of metric tons), Exports and Imports. ATA nations are highlighted. They absolutely dominate production and exports and, correspondingly, are minnows in imports.
Tea Exports and Imports (ATA members shaded)
Production | Exports | Imports | ||||
1 | China | 2.5* | China | 1.8 | Pakistan | 0.6 |
2 | India | 1.3 | Kenya | 1.1 | Russia | 0.5 |
3 | Kenya | 0.4 | India | 0.8 | USA | 0.5 |
4 | Sri Lanka | 0.4 | Sri Lanka | 0.7 | UK | 0.4 |
5 | Vietnam | 0.3 | Germany | 0.3 | Egypt | 0.3 |
6 | Turkey | 0.2 | Poland | 0.2 | Germany | 0.2 |
7 | Indonesia | 0.1 | Japan | 0.1 | Morocco | 0.2 |
8 | Myanmar | 0.1 | UK | 0.1 | Japan | 0.2 |
9 | Iran | 0.1 | USA | 0.1 | Vietnam | 0.2 |
10 | Bangladesh | 0.1 | Vietnam | 0.1 | France | 0.2 |
*Reported in millions of metric tons
For the ATA, the agenda is expanding both the size and quality of the trade space and mobilizing to move forward on sustainable development as a block. The specific targets are:
ATA emerged from a series of such interactions, with a pivotal MOU in December 2018 that focused on global market promotion of China and India as premium producers.
Prices drop with oversupply and costs increase with underproduction. The future of tea rests with premiumization, a message the ATA aims to make its brand.
SOURCES: Business Standard, India Today, Times of India
Sri Lanka, China: Tea industry newsletters