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Georgia: Using Tea To Promote Peace In The South Caucasus

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  • Georgia: Using Tea To Promote Peace In The South Caucasus

    GEORGIA: USING TEA TO PROMOTE PEACE IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS
    Nino Patsuria

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav100909a.shtml
    10/09/09

    One of the few things that all residents of the South Caucasus have
    in common is a love of tea. Betting on local tea-drinking customs,
    a group of regional manufacturers hopes that a joint tea brand --
    involving individuals and entities from Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia,
    as well as the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh
    -- may help ease feelings of enmity in the region.

    "We're creating a unified tea brand to show Europe that we have
    another image apart from conflicts," said Ismail Allakhverdyev,
    the project's Azerbaijani coordinator and a livestock expert for the
    Azerbaijani Ministry of Agriculture. "When professional businessmen
    talk, political issues are absent"

    The project's brand -- Caucasus Tea -- will offer tea leaves from
    all five participating countries and breakaway territories. Georgia
    and Azerbaijan will produce black and green tea; Armenia and the
    disputed regions of Karabakh and South Ossetia will contribute herbal
    teas. Expected to launch by late 2009, the project is the brainchild of
    national tea associations and the British government-funded Caucasus
    Business Development Network, a non-governmental organization that
    promotes business initiatives in the South Caucasus as a form of
    conflict resolution.

    The project's timing proved less than auspicious. It kicked off in July
    2008 at a regional tea conference in Baku, just before the outbreak
    of the five-day war between Georgia and Russia. That conflict spooked
    many foreign investors. The war also may have cost the project one
    key participant: Russia, with its smoky black teas from the Krasnodar
    region, situated to the north of breakaway Abkhazia.

    On hand for the initial discussions, the Association of Tea and Coffee
    Producing Companies of the Russian Federation, a group of the largest
    Russian coffee and tea producers also known as RosTeaCoffee, has not
    contacted any of the project partners since the end of the conflict.

    Ustin Shteyman, the 89-year-old chairman of RosTeaCoffee, says the
    organization considered itself merely an observer at the initial
    Baku talks. RosTeaCoffee officials now believe the project has slim
    chances for success. Caucasus Tea is more about politics than business,
    Shteyman said.

    "Georgia and Azerbaijan are at a different level of tea production
    at the moment and both lag behind on tea production standards,
    while [Russia's] Krasnodar tea is of better quality," Shteyman
    said. "Restoring [tea] quality requires big investments and much time."

    Not all of the project's partners are actual tea producers, he
    continued, noting that Armenia, Karabakh and South Ossetia will
    contribute only herbal teas. "Herbal tea is not tea to me," scoffed
    Shteyman.

    RosTeaCoffee General Director Ramaz Chanturia argues that the project
    also requires intergovernmental cooperation among all partners -- a
    remote possibility in the South Caucasus. So far, government agencies
    in the project partners' countries are taking no official part in
    Caucasus Tea.

    "If we want to develop a united brand, we have to base this concept
    on international experience and work out this initiative at the
    inter-governmental level," Chanturia maintained. "The involved
    countries could get the right of international copyright protection for
    the . . . brand Caucasus Tea, create a logo and a special trademark
    for the products produced in the region, create a government-based
    structure responsible for promoting and protecting this brand in the
    international market."

    Russian tea producing companies, he continued, will participate
    in this process only in compliance with Russia's interests in the
    region. RosTeaCoffee planned to collaborate with Abkhaz tea producers,
    but a lack of financing put the venture on hold.

    One Caucasus Tea partner -- South Ossetia -- agrees with RosTeaCoffee's
    reasoning, but Ossetian representatives contend that the project's
    peace-making angle is a worthwhile pursuit. "The project would show
    ... that a degree of common sense has remained in us," said South
    Ossetian coordinator Timur Tskhovrebov, a journalist who works with
    the Caucasus Business Development Network in South Ossetia.

    Tskhovrebov told EurasiaNet that the de facto government of South
    Ossetia has not "welcomed the project initiative, but has not tried
    to stop it, either."

    Georgia's other breakaway region, Abkhazia, has so far reportedly
    shied away from the project.

    Representatives of relevant Abkhaz companies did not respond to
    EurasiaNet requests for comment.

    Karabakh, the scene of a six-year war between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
    reportedly plans to contribute a local mountain herbal tea to the
    project. Karabakh representatives could not be reached for comment.

    How much tea each participant will contribute to the Caucasus Tea
    brand for now remains unknown.

    Georgia, once a tea powerhouse, produced 90,000-130,000 tons per year
    during the Soviet era, but production in recent years has plummeted
    to roughly 4,000-5,000 tons annually, according to the Association of
    Georgian Tea Producers. Ninety percent of that production is exported
    abroad to Ukraine, Germany, the United Kingdom, Mongolia and Middle
    Eastern countries.

    Data on Azerbaijani tea production was not immediately available
    from the Association of Azerbaijani Tea Producers or from the
    government. Azerbaijani project coordinator Allakhverdyev noted that
    Azerbaijani tea plantations have not been updated since the Soviet
    era. One industry source estimates that Azerbaijan's tea production
    is just a tiny fraction of 200-300 tons produced per year during the
    Soviet era.

    Once the brand goes into the marketing phase, consumers will not know
    which country or region's tea dominates the contents of a Caucasus Tea
    box. Boxes will be stamped "Made in the Caucasus," with no mention of
    the particular countries of origin. That absence is deliberate. "If
    we put the names of breakaway republics side by side with legally
    recognized countries, it means we also recognize their sovereignty,"
    commented Tengiz Svanidze, chairperson of the Association of Georgian
    Tea Producers.

    While the region's tea industry may not be as robust as it once was,
    and the project fraught with potential political complications, talking
    about how tea could foster an "image of a business-friendly place,"
    according to Artush Lazarian, the project's Armenian coordinator and
    the chief executive officer of Yerevan's Caucasian Center for Proposing
    Non-Traditional Conflict Resolution Methods. The possibilities give
    participants at least something to talk about.

    Azerbaijani coordinator Allakhverdyev agrees. "It's better to have
    economic dialogue than not to have any," he said. "Dialogue leads to
    solutions, ultimately."

    Editor's Note: Nino Patsuria is a freelance reporter based in Tbilisi.
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