
Agriculture and
Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe has urged tea exporters
and investors to package the commodity in Kenya, saying the move will enhance
freshness, improve traceability, and increase returns for farmers.
Speaking at the North America Tea Conference in South Carolina, Kagwe said the government has scrapped taxes on packaging materials for agricultural products to encourage local value addition.
He noted that packaging tea at source not only reduces
costs but also enables exporters to meet international market specifications
with direct-to-shelf products.
“By packaging at
origin, we eliminate unnecessary costs, improve competitiveness, and strengthen
Kenya’s position in the global tea market,” Kagwe told delegates.
The CS was
accompanied by Tea Board of Kenya CEO Willy Mutai, KTDA Chair Geoffrey Kirundi,
KTDA CEO Wilson Muthaura, and Kenya’s Ambassador to the U.S. David Kerich.
Kagwe highlighted Kenya’s continued dominance in global tea production, reporting that output reached 598.47 million kilograms in 2024—a 4.95 percent rise from the previous year.
He attributed the growth to favourable weather, subsidised fertiliser distribution, and increased processing capacity.
The Cabinet Secretary also emphasised Kenya’s diversification into orthodox and speciality teas, particularly purple tea, developed at the Tea Research Institute.
The
variety, unique to Kenya, is prized for its high antioxidant content and health
benefits, fetching three to four times the price of black tea.
“Kenya’s innovation
in tea not only secures better earnings for farmers but also places us ahead in
meeting shifting global consumer demands,” Kagwe said.
He further
underlined tea’s environmental and cultural importance, describing it as a crop
that sustains livelihoods while conserving ecosystems through soil erosion
prevention, biodiversity support, and carbon sequestration.
Kagwe concluded by
calling on the U.S. market to embrace Kenyan black, green, and purple teas,
stressing that “quality will always find a market.”