US-Iran conflict disrupts Sri Lanka tea exports and livelihoods

21 May 2026, 5:11 AM
US-Iran conflict disrupts Sri Lanka tea exports and livelihoods

COLOMBO, May 21 — Tea factory worker Jacintha Malar once relied on cooking gas to prepare meals for her family but has switched to firewood after the West Asia conflict pushed up energy costs and battered Sri Lanka’s tea industry.

Malar and her husband, a tea plucker in Sri Lanka’s central hills, are among those dependent on the country’s US$1.5 billion (RM5 billion) tea industry, which employs about 2.4 million people.

Workers like Malar are increasingly vulnerable to the fallout from the Middle East conflict, with nearly half of Sri Lanka’s Ceylon Tea exports, worth about US$680 million (RM2.6 billion) annually, going to the region.

Tea plantation workers usually earn a daily wage between 1,350 and 1,750 rupees (RM16 to RM21), slightly above the national daily minimum wage of 1,200 rupees.

More than half of plantation workers live below the World Bank’s international lower-middle-income poverty line of US$3.65 (RM14.20) a day.

Jacintha Malar, 38, and her husband, Rengasami Sathiyaseelan, 45, workers at the Dunkeld Tea Estate who are struggling amid ongoing inflation due to the West Asia crisis, make tea at the kitchen of their home in Hatton, Sri Lanka, on April 30, 2026.

“Plantation workers are facing crisis after crisis,” said Thangawel Ganeshalingam, convener for the Movement for Plantation People’s Land Rights, an organisation working with about 200 plantations.

“Due to higher costs, school absenteeism is on the rise, people are cutting down on meals and some are leaving the plantations looking for better jobs in cities.”

Tea export earnings fell 17.3 per cent year-on-year in March to US$114.75 million, according to the state-run Export Development Board (EDB).

Exports to Iraq, the largest buyer, dropped 38 per cent, while shipments to the United Arab Emirates plunged 93 per cent, EDB data showed. Iran imports eight million to 10 million kg of premium Sri Lankan tea annually.

Dilmah, whose Ceylon tea brand is present in 108 countries and derives about 30 per cent of its business from West Asia, is facing logistics and shipping disruptions, accelerating its push into Canada, South America and the United States.

An employee prepares tea in a tasting room at the Dilmah tea factory in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on April 23, 2026.

“We have absorbed the costs for a while, but fuel costs and knock-on effects on logistics, whether between Perth and Melbourne or Colombo and Dubai, are fuelling inflation everywhere,” said Dilhan Fernando, chairman and chief executive of Dilmah Ceylon Tea Company PLC.

The blow to the tea industry could further imperil Sri Lanka’s economy, already reeling from the conflict’s fallout. The government has raised fuel prices by 40 per cent, rationed supplies and declared Wednesdays a public holiday to conserve energy.

For Malar, already struggling to make ends meet, a prolonged Middle East conflict is worrying.

“We don’t know whether we can cope. If this war continues, many people will face hardship,” she said.

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