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    Darjeeling’s Tea Industry Under Siege: Heavy Rains, Climate Shocks, and Economic Loss

    EnvironmentClimate changeDarjeeling’s Tea Industry Under Siege: Heavy Rains, Climate Shocks,...
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    Darjeeling’s Tea Industry Under Siege: Heavy Rains, Climate Shocks, and Economic Loss

    Heavy October rains ruined Darjeeling’s autumn flush, damaging tea bushes across estates, blocking roads, cutting power, and halting harvests, costing growers 15 per cent of annual production.

    Darjeeling’s mist-draped hills, long celebrated for producing the world’s most exquisite tea, are now confronting a crisis that is both climatic and existential. The torrential rains and landslides that lashed the region in earlier this month have caused severe damage to tea estates, exposing the vulnerability of this Himalayan ecosystem to the growing volatility of the monsoon. For an industry already grappling with declining yields, ageing bushes, and labour shortages, the floods have added a new layer of uncertainty.

    According to estimates reported by Outlook Business, the recent episode has inflicted losses of nearly ₹50 crore across Darjeeling’s tea estates. At least 30 to 35 gardens have been severely hit, with many suffering collapsed slopes, washed-away bushes, and destroyed infrastructure. In some gardens, dozens of acres have been rendered unproductive; one estate lost about 20 acres, another lost close to 10,000 tea bushes – roughly two hectares of cultivation. The October rains also coincided with the autumn flush, a critical harvest that typically contributes about 15 per cent of Darjeeling’s annual production. With roads blocked, power lines down, and labourers unable to access the fields, the flush has been effectively ruined, translating into further economic setbacks for growers.

    Escalating Climatic Pattern

    Scientific evidence suggests that such disasters are not isolated incidents but part of an escalating climatic pattern. Meteorological data indicate that rainfall intensity and temperature fluctuations in the Eastern Himalayas have both increased over the past two decades. A long-term study conducted by the Darjeeling Tea Research and Development Centre found that green leaf productivity has dropped by over 40 per cent compared with levels in the early 1990s. Researchers attribute this to erratic rainfall distribution, shifting humidity levels, and rising temperatures. A more recent climate-yield analysis between 1991 and 2023 revealed that while rainfall anomalies show a modest positive correlation with yield, temperature anomalies have a distinctly negative effect. In simple terms, Darjeeling’s tea plants can tolerate changes in moisture to an extent, but they are far more sensitive to heat stress.

    The heavy rainfall in October therefore acted as a catalyst for a range of destructive processes. On the steep, fragile slopes of Darjeeling, soil erosion and slope destabilisation were almost inevitable. Torrents of water stripped the land of its topsoil, exposing or uprooting plant roots. Flash floods washed away bushes and deposited thick layers of silt, suffocating whatever vegetation survived. When waterlogging persists, the oxygen available to plant roots drops sharply, leading to long-term yield decline. Damaged roads and blocked drainage channels compounded the crisis by preventing workers from reaching the fields or transporting harvested leaves to factories. The rains also altered humidity and pest dynamics, creating favourable conditions for fungal diseases and insect infestations. What had been a thriving, if struggling, ecosystem quickly turned into a scene of devastation.

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    Gaps in Implementation

    At the institutional level, the Tea Board of India (TBI) has sought to confront the growing challenge of climate change through a series of adaptation programmes. The Board, which oversees research, regulation and marketing for the tea sector, administers a Climate Change Adaptation Fund established in collaboration with the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD). About ₹125 crore, has been earmarked to support 50,000 small tea growers across West Bengal, Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh. The fund is intended to finance better drainage systems, shade-tree planting, watershed management, irrigation upgrades and pest-management initiatives. For a region like Darjeeling, which faces a unique combination of high rainfall and fragile terrain, such interventions are vital.

    The Tea Board also supervises the Darjeeling Tea Research and Development Centre, which has been monitoring the impacts of temperature and rainfall changes on yield and quality. It has encouraged estates to adopt new shade management practices, replanting schedules and pest control strategies adapted to changing weather conditions. Moreover, the Board’s regulatory work – especially the protection of the Darjeeling Geographical Indication label – helps estates secure premium prices that can finance climate resilience. Yet, despite these efforts, gaps remain in implementation. The bureaucracy of fund distribution, the small scale of most growers, and the remoteness of many gardens mean that the benefits of adaptation financing often reach too slowly or not at all.

    The economic implications of the recent rains are immense. The ₹50-crore loss estimate reflects only direct damages, not the cascading losses from ruined crops, disrupted processing, and the decline in export-grade output. Each flush lost reduces not only income but also market reputation, since Darjeeling tea depends heavily on consistent quality for its branding. The Tea Board’s own production data for India indicate a broader climatic malaise: national tea output fell by nearly eight per cent in 2024 due to erratic weather, while in June 2025 alone production was down nine per cent year-on-year. Darjeeling’s vulnerability is thus part of a national pattern in which climate stress undermines both productivity and quality. Rising input costs – such as replanting, fertilizers, and infrastructure repair – further erode the profit margins of planters, even when global prices rise due to supply constraints.

    Human Cost of the Crisis

    Beyond economics, the floods have social consequences. Thousands of plantation workers faced wage losses during the shutdown, and several lost their homes to landslides. Labour migration, already a growing problem, is likely to accelerate as livelihoods become less secure. Estate managers report increasing difficulty in maintaining the traditional workforce, and younger generations are abandoning tea work altogether. These demographic shifts add to the long-term fragility of Darjeeling’s tea economy.

    Experts say that to safeguard the future, what Darjeeling needs is not merely compensation but systemic resilience. Soil conservation must become a central practice, with reinforced terracing, contour planting, and re-vegetation of steep slopes. Agroforestry systems using shade trees and companion crops can moderate microclimates and enhance biodiversity, reducing the stress on tea bushes. Replanting with more resilient clones, designed to withstand both heat and heavy moisture, could stabilise yields. Infrastructure must also be climate-proofed: roads, culverts, drainage networks, and bridges need upgrading to handle extreme precipitation. Early-warning systems for rainfall and slope movement, backed by localised meteorological stations, can help estates prepare for emergencies.

    Financial mechanisms are equally crucial. Crop-insurance schemes tailored to plantation crops could offset the losses from floods and landslides. Rapid-relief and replanting subsidies should be built into the Tea Board’s climate fund, ensuring that support reaches estates within weeks rather than months. Finally, governance reforms are essential. Unregulated construction and deforestation in the Darjeeling hills have amplified runoff and erosion; stricter land-use planning and enforcement are indispensable to any climate-adaptation framework.

    Tea culture under stress

    The challenge for policymakers is to view Darjeeling not as an isolated agricultural zone but as a climate-sensitive heritage landscape. Each episode of torrential rain erodes not only soil but also centuries of human and ecological balance. For planters, adaptation must move from rhetoric to routine – investing in drainage, agroforestry, and data-driven agronomy as integral to business, not as add-ons. For the Tea Board, climate adaptation must evolve beyond pilot projects into permanent policy. And for government agencies, the hills demand integrated watershed management that bridges forestry, agriculture, and disaster preparedness.

    Darjeeling tea, often called the “champagne of teas,” owes its uniqueness to a fragile confluence of altitude, mist and meticulous labour. That equilibrium is breaking down under the weight of climate volatility. The October disaster is a stark warning that the region’s future depends on collective, sustained adaptation. Without such action, Darjeeling may soon become less a symbol of India’s tea heritage and more a casualty of a warming planet.

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