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World’s ‘most expensive’ tea grown in Chinese panda poo

CHENGDU, China (AFP) ― Chinese entrepreneur An Yanshi is convinced he has found the key ingredient to produce the world’s most expensive tea ― panda poo.

The former calligraphy teacher has purchased 11 tons of excrement from a panda breeding center to fertilize a tea crop in the mountains of Sichuan province in southwestern China, home to the black and white bears.

An says he will harvest the first batch of tea leaves this spring and it will be the “world’s most expensive tea” at almost 220,000 yuan ($35,000) for 500 grams.

Chinese tea drinkers regard the first batch of tea to be harvested in the early spring as the best and successive batches, regarded as inferior, will sell for around 20,000 yuan.

The 41-year-old, who is so passionate about his new project he dressed in a panda suit for his interview with AFP, has been ridiculed by some in China for his extravagant claims of the potential health benefits of the tea.

But he insists he is deadly serious, saying he quit his job at Sichuan University to throw himself “heart and soul” into his company, Panda Tea, whose logo features a smiling panda wearing a bow tie and holding a steaming glass of green tea.

While An hopes to make money from the tea, which he has planted on just over a hectare of land, his main mission is to convince the world to protect the environment and replace chemical fertilizers with animal faeces ― before it is too late.

“Panda dung is rich in nutrition ... and should be much better than chemical fertilizers,” An said, as he sat at a traditional Chinese tea table drinking tea grown with cow manure.

“People should make a harmonious relationship with heaven, earth and the environment,” An said.

“Everybody has an obligation to protect the environment,” he added, as he showed AFP dozens of traditional Chinese scroll paintings that he has created of cheerful-looking pandas, bamboo and calligraphy.

The tea aficionado got the idea to use panda faeces as fertilizer after attending a seminar last year where he discovered that the bears absorbed less than 30 percent of the bamboo they consumed, excreting the remaining 70 percent.

An showed AFP a glass jar of fresh-looking panda faeces, which he uses to fertilize two tea plants in his office, noting the “quality” and “green” color of the dung.

He is so convinced that Panda Tea will be a hit that he has patented the idea to prevent a competitor stealing it ― a common occurrence in a country where laws protecting intellectual property rights are often flouted.

His claim that the green tea will help people lose weight and protect them from radiation has been ridiculed by some Chinese web users, who have expressed doubts about the purported health benefits of the tea and the high asking price for the first harvest.

“If it is such a good fertilizer for tea plants, I want to ask this teacher: why don’t you just eat panda dung? Then you can get the rest of the 70 percent nutrition,” a Web user called Baihuashu said.

Another Web user called 24-0 said: “Over 200,000 yuan per jin (500 grams) for panda tea fertilized by panda droppings ― is that for drinking tea or drinking pandas’ blood?”

Despite the online detractors of his yet-to-be-tested tea, An said he remained undeterred and was already thinking about expanding his business.

“After the first batch is harvested, if the quality is really good, we will expand the economies of scale,” said An, waving his panda paws for emphasis.
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