Business
The Evolving Story of Pure Ceylon Tea
Sri Lanka’s Liquid Gold:
The world recently celebrated International Tea Day on 21 May 2025 under the theme “Bringing people together over a cup of tea.” The day aims to raise awareness of tea’s long history and its deep cultural and economic significance worldwide, promoting collective action for sustainable production and consumption while highlighting tea’s fundamental role in uplifting the Sri Lankan economy.
The origins of tea stretch as far back 4762 years to Emperor Shen Nong. Since then, this beverage has been lauded for its flavor, and its contributions to health, culture and socioeconomic development, a legacy which remains as relevant as ever. Today, tea is grown in many diverse regions across the world, supporting over 13 million livelihoods —including smallholder farmers and their households globally.
Yet of the world’s tea growing regions, none is more unique than Sri Lanka and its famed Pure Ceylon Tea. Synonymous with premium quality, authenticity, sustainable and ethical production, the island’s orthodox black tea has stood out for nearly 160 years as the world’s most sought after brew.
An unlikely global sensation: the ascendency of Pure Ceylon Tea
Sri Lanka’s own journey towards mastery of tea was non-linear. In the mid-19th century, Sri Lanka’s plantation economy teetered on the brink of collapse. Coffee had been the island’s main export, but when a virulent strain of coffee-rust fungus struck in 1869, entire estates were laid waste. Facing financial ruin, enterprising planters turned their gaze toward tea—a crop that, until then, had been little more than an experimental curiosity.

James Taylor, a Scottish planter, who began cultivating tea at the Loolecondera Estate, laying the foundation for the island’s tea industry.
Among those visionaries was James Taylor, a young Scottish planter who in 1867 began cultivating tea on a seven-hectare plot at Loolecondera Estate near Kandy. Taylor’s rigorous trials, conducted with Assam hybrid seedlings from the Peradeniya Botanical Gardens, quickly demonstrated tea’s promise.
By 1872, he had erected a rudimentary factory of his own design, complete with a leaf-cutting machine, and sent the first small consignment of Ceylon tea to London. Overcoming initial skepticism, early tasting reports praised its bright liquor and brisk flavour—qualities that would soon distinguish Ceylon tea on the global stage. The rest as they say is history.
What began as a lifeline for a struggling coffee sector rapidly evolved into a powerful engine of growth in its own right. Within a decade, hundreds of acres of abandoned coffee fields had been replanted with tea, and the landscape of the central highlands was transformed.
Railway lines, initially built for coffee, were extended deeper into the hills to carry the new tea harvests, while Colombo agency houses organized exports to European markets. By the 1888s, Ceylon tea was commanding premium prices. While the cultivated extent of tea exceeded peak coffee cultivation, it’s emergence not only salvaged the island’s plantation economy but laid the foundation for what would become the world’s sole benchmark for a quality cuppa.
An island of diversity: the recipe for global success
Found across the island’s picturesque central mountains and down to its southern foothills, Sri Lanka tea’s shifting elevations, winding valleys and patchwork microclimates combine to shape distinct qualities in every harvest that cannot be found anywhere else in the world.
Sri Lanka’s tea country unfolds across three elevation bands, each imparting its own signature. High-grown gardens above 1,200 meters—like the fog-shrouded slopes of Nuwara Eliya and the undulating heights of Dimbula—thrive in cool, misty air that slows leaf growth and concentrates delicate floral aromas. Their cups are bright and fragrant, with Nuwara Eliya often likened to champagne, while Dimbula brings a mellow sweetness and fine golden hue.
Mid-grown estates between 600 and 1,200 meters—anchored by Uva, Uda Pussellawa and Kandy—experience moderate temperatures and alternating monsoon rains that sculpt versatile flavours. Uva teas carry an aromatic natural bouquet. The famous desiccating ‘kachan’ winds that originate in the arid deserts of North India and sweep across Sri Lanka’s Eastern slopes and through the Malwatte belt between July and September each year, these seasonal valley-grown teas are among Sri Lanka’s most prized produce. Uda Pussellawa yields darker, tangy infusions with liquors of medium body and a rosy character; and Kandy, one of the island’s oldest regions, delivers a sturdy copper brew with spicy, nutty depth.
Below 600 meters, low-grown districts such as Ruhuna and Sabaragamuwa bask in warmth and humidity. Here the long sunshine hours and gentle breezes of the southern plains accelerate leaf growth, producing full-bodied teas with dark liquor—robust and richly flavoured in Ruhuna, softly sweet with caramel hints in sprawling Sabaragamuwa.
An evolving range of premium varietals
Even within a single estate, ridges, hollows and varying exposures create micro-climates that lend subtle nuance to each. It is this intricate interplay of elevation, soil, wind and rain that gives Pure Ceylon Tea its extraordinary diversity and a character which cannot be found anywhere else in the world.
These qualities are further characterized by two dominant distinct wet and dry monsoons; the North East and the South West. The North East monsoon from October to January and the South West monsoon from May to August.
Upholding centuries-old orthodox methods, the majority of Sri Lankan tea bushes are still hand-plucked with “two leaves and a bud” at first light and processed through careful withering, rolling and oxidation to preserve leaf integrity and maximise flavour.
In recent decades, Ceylon’s high-elevation estates have also produced exceptional green and white teas. Sun-withered “Silver Tips” and lightly steamed green leaves showcase delicate floral and grassy notes, commanding premium prices and demonstrating that Sri Lanka’s mastery extends far beyond its black tea heritage. Innovators have also revived heirloom cultivars like “Golden Curls” and introduced single-estate seasonal flushes, each offering a distinct taste of its garden’s terroir.
People & Communities—Stewards of the Leaf
Behind every cup of Pure Ceylon Tea lies the labour and dedication of estate workers and smallholder farmers. While livelihoods in the tea sector have always been a contentious issue, Sri Lanka tea harvesters have continuously earned as much as 50% more than their peers in comparable tea-producing countries.
Smallholders, who now account for almost three-quarters of national production, cultivate tea on family plots that supply a network of tea factories – both independent and connected to Regional Plantation Companies (RPCs). Many of these factories are now global leaders in adoption of rooftop solar, biomass, mini-hydro and other energy efficient mechanisms that are reshaping efficiency in the global plantation industry.
The Planters’ Association of Ceylon has long championed these stewards of the leaf, pioneering training programmes in sustainable agronomy and ethical workplace standards. Through RPC-led certification schemes, global best practices in modernized and precision agriculture have been integrated into daily operations, including integrated pest management, water, soil, flora and fauna conservation techniques that protect both the environment and tea quality.
Crucially, significant portions of revenue generated from tea flows back into rural schools, clinics and infrastructure projects, reinforcing tea’s role as an engine of social development. RPC estates also fund Child Development Centers which provide early childhood education and nutrition.
These initiatives which have resulted in significant improvements in health and overall education outcomes among the 1 million strong community that resides on the estates, as well as the approximately 125,000 strong RPC workforce and their families.
Women’s empowerment initiatives including focused opportunities for professional development and career advancement have opened new avenues in Sri Lanka’s tea industry to rise into positions that under colonial rule were closed off to them.
Community centres double as agricultural extension hubs, blending technical advice with literacy classes and health screenings. These efforts underscore a central truth: the strength of Pure Ceylon Tea rests not only in its soil and climate but in the hands of the people who cultivate it.
As global demand grows, it is this human network of skilled pickers, innovative smallholders and community advocates working in partnership with globally respected RPCs that set standards and continue to drive innovation that ensures Ceylon tea remains a model of quality, sustainability and shared prosperity.
As the industry evolves to cater to traditional demand as well growing value-added innovations including tea concentrates, essences, and ready-to-drink formats —it remains rooted in the hands of dedicated estate workers and smallholder families who uphold standards of quality and sustainability.
Business
IMF approves USD695 million for Sri Lanka
AFP –The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) board approved two reviews of Sri Lanka’s loan programme, making USD695 million in additional loans immediately available to the island nation.
It is the latest tranche in the country’s four-year USD3 billion bailout, with the Fund warning of further risks due to the economic impact of the Middle East conflict.
Surging oil prices due to the conflict have heavily impacted many import-dependent Asian countries.
“Sri Lanka’s strong implementation under the EFF arrangement has continued despite challenging circumstances,” said the IMF’s Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair Kenji Okamura.
“Gains from the economic reform programme helped preserve economic resilience and provided room to respond to cyclone Ditwah and the Middle East conflict. The latter, however, has significantly worsened Sri Lanka’s economic outlook and tilted risks to the downside.”
The IMF projects 2026 growth to slow to three per cent, with higher oil prices increasing inflation and weighing on the current account balance.
The board’s approval was contingent on Sri Lanka adjusting certain energy market subsidies issued in the wake of the conflict.
The statement said the Sri Lankan authorities had met the Fund’s requirements on fuel and electricity prices meeting cost-recovery criteria.
Criteria on ensuring no new external debts and on not imposing or intensifying import restrictions “were not observed”, however.
Business
Cambridge College honours students at awards ceremony
The Cambridge College of English Language Training recently held a certificate and medal awarding ceremony to recognize the academic achievements of students who successfully completed Cambridge English examinations.
The ceremony was held at the Hindu Cultural Hall in Kandy with the Vice Chancellor of the University of Peradeniya, Prof. W.M.T. Madhujith, attending as the Chief Guest, while Kandy Mayor Chandrasiri Wijenayake participated as the Guest of Honour.
Founded on March 1, 2024, by English tutor, author and Cambridge TKT lecturer T. Ravichandran, the institution has emerged as a leading centre for Cambridge English examination preparation in Kandy.
Beginning with an initial intake of 30 students, the college has expanded rapidly and currently serves more than 300 students.
The institution’s achievements were further recognized when it received the “Emerging Star Award 2025” at the Annual Coordinators Conference 2025 (South Asia).
The college provides training for students between the ages of seven and 18 across six stages of Cambridge English examinations, including Young Learners English (YLE) Starters, Movers and Flyers, as well as KET, PET and FCE examinations.
Cambridge English qualifications are internationally recognized and are designed to assess language proficiency in line with the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR).
The ceremony concluded with the presentation of certificates and medals to students in recognition of their academic performance and commitment.
Text and Pic by SK Samaranayake
Business
ABC Australia, Maharaja Media Network ink MoU to expand Indo-Pacific media collaboration
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC Australia) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Sri Lanka’s Maharaja Media Network (MMN), marking a significant expansion of media cooperation aimed at strengthening content exchange, co-productions and professional collaboration across the Indo-Pacific.
The agreement builds on an initial broadcast partnership established in 2022 and an expanded licensing arrangement in 2023, under which ABC programming was made available free-to-air to Sri Lankan audiences through MTV Channel (Private) Limited, part of the Capital Maharaja Group.
Under the new framework, the two organisations will collaborate across television, radio and digital platforms, with a focus on co-produced content, editorial exchange, training opportunities and joint storytelling initiatives.
MMN, Sri Lanka’s largest media network, operates across television, radio, digital media, music and film, including MTV Channel (Private) Limited and MBC Networks (Private) Limited.
Australian High Commission officials described the agreement as a deepening of regional media ties. “This will cover co-production, content sharing and broader cooperation across the Asia-Pacific in telling stories that speak to both countries,” said Matthew Duckworth.
ABC International Head Claire M. Gorman said the partnership reflected a shared commitment to public-interest media and stronger regional storytelling.
Capital Maharaja Group Director Chevaan Daniel said the relationship, which began during Sri Lanka’s economic crisis in 2022, had grown through continued collaboration, including during the 2025 Ditwah cyclone response.
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