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imageNAIVASHA: Kenya expects production of tea to jump 10 to 15 percent this year to 430 million to 450 million kg on the back of heavy rains associated with the el Nino weather phenomenon, the agriculture industry regulator said on Tuesday.

The East African nation is the world's No. 1 exporter of black tea and the crop is its top foreign exchange earner. It earned 125.25 billion shillings ($1.24 billion) from tea exports last year.

Alfred Busolo, the acting director general of the Agricultural, Fisheries and Food Authority (AFFA) told Reuters the extra output this year would compensate for a drop in prices and push earnings to last year's levels.

"We are looking at production increasing over last year to the tune of just 10 to 15 percent ... We may go back to 430 million to 450 million kg production," he said at an industry meeting in the Rift Valley town of Naivasha.

Output rose by close to a third in the first quarter of this year, Busolo said without giving a specific number, attributing the surge to heavy rains that pounded the country, a departure from the usual sunny spells at the start of the year.

The increased production has already hit the average price of tea at the weekly auction in the port of Mombasa.

"Prices have come down from the region of $3 (per kg) to close to $2. That is quite a huge drop," said Lerionka Tiampati, the managing director of KTDA, which represents small farmers and accounts for 60 percent of Kenya's production.

Busolo said the projected higher output would help to offset the impact of lower prices and help deal with any exchange rate movements that could curb earnings.

"We are looking forward to increasing volumes offered at the auction so there is a compensating effect and I would say we may do better than last year, marginally, or equal to last year," he said.

"We may just be around the 125 billion shillings like we did last year."

Copyright Reuters, 2016

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