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Blooming shame: Coronavirus, China lockdowns, Ukraine war hurts Thai orchid industry
- Pandemic forced one in five orchid farms in Thailand to close, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has seen fertiliser and pesticide prices rise up to 30 per cent
- Pre-pandemic China bought 270 million orchid stems annually from Thailand – a figure that dropped to 170 million last year
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Thailand’s orchid growers, already weary after two years of being battered by the pandemic, are bracing for fresh blows to their livelihood as the war in Ukraine and changing weather patterns further cloud their futures.
Once considered a popular pastime among the elite in Thailand, orchid growing has developed into a multimillion-dollar industry, and the kingdom is the world’s biggest producer and exporter of cut orchids.
But the pandemic has seen one in five farms shut recently, according to the Thai Orchid Exporter Association.
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“No one has the heart to buy flowers, and transport is very complicated,” said Somchai Lerdrungwitayachai as he stares in despair at the sea of purple at his orchid farm west of Bangkok.

He grows Dendrobium Sonia orchids – a hybrid variety with delicate white and purple petals. Popular in Japan, China and the United States, they are used for anything from religious ceremonies to college graduations.
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