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Turkish tea company Çaykur opens first factory in northern Pakistan Ankara is ready to support Islam

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Turkish tea company Çaykur opens first factory in northern Pakistan
  • Ankara is ready to support Islamabad on tea saplings as well
Pakistan
by Dawood Rehman | Published on April 17, 2018 (Edited April 17, 2018)
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ISLAMABAD – Turkey’s state-run tea company, Çaykur, has opened a factory in Mansehra, around 200 kilometers from the capital Islamabad.

The company’s chairman, Imdat Sütlüoğluu, along with Yusuf Zafar, the head of Pakistan’s Agricultural Research Council, and Farrukh Hamid, the head of Pakistan’s National Tea and High Value Crops Research Institute, participated in the opening ceremony.

Calling it a ‘small gift’ for Pakistan, Sütlüoğlu told the media that the factory would have a daily production capacity of five tons. Although Pakistanis consume a lot of tea, they are importing tea, he said, adding that the idea of opening a factory came from Pakistan itself.

According to official data, Pakistan spent over 23 billion Pakistani rupees (around $220 million) on tea imports during the first six months of 2017. The South Asian country imports tea from 16 countries.

Over the past two decades, the country’s tea imports have ballooned over 325 percent.


Turkey is ready to support Pakistan on tea saplings as well, according to Mr Sütlüoğlu.

After the opening ceremony, high-quality tea saplings brought from Turkey were planted in the factory garden.

Last August, Turkey donated an automatic tea-processing plant to Pakistan to support high-tech tea cultivation.

Çaykur is involved in 38 countries in Europe, 37 in Africa, 15 in Asia, 14 in the Mideast, and six in the Americas.

Çaykur, founded in 1983, is a state-owned enterprise, and its processed-tea products include white, green, black, organic, leaf, and iced tea. It employs more than 10,600 people in its 56 factories.
 
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I visited the area and went to some tea farms earlier this month in Shinkiari area (In Mansehra district). The whole region is shifting toward tea farming and by the looks of it, the whole hills and mountain may soon be covered with tea farms (these are not forested hills) totally ending tea imports (which was among the largest imports some decade and a half ago). There are government and multinational companies research centers operating in the area, a huge population is getting job opportunity in this field and over all, it is all good news. I hope if we keep pace we will be EXPORTING tea in years to come.
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These are from one of the research center farms i stopped at just to see what are they doing.
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Nice. Amazing how little attention has been paid to tea cultivation in Pakistan given that a hugely tea drinking oriented culture persists in the country.
Well, just one example that shows our incompetence. Pakistan has one of the best agricultural land and diversity of climatic conditions from Ran Kuchh to Khunjerab that we be able to grow most of the agricultural items inside our country with little research and planning.

chup ae
chach nikal yahan sai
Yeh bechara har aik se zaleel hota ha :lol:
 
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Kahva is making a comeback and i dont like that one bit. My chai is endangered. Atleast in our household

tum jese chai kay pujariyon kay sath yahi hona chaiye tha...
ab ahista ahista kaali chai or kahva chaaron tarf se gher lega tumhe..
hu ha ha
 
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