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India cuts coffee output estimate by 16 percent as heavy rains trim yield

A visitor checks coffee beans at the 'International Coffee Festival 2007' in Bangalore, February 24, 2007. REUTERS/Jagadeesh Nv/File Photo (Reuters)

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India is likely to produce 319,500 tonnes of coffee in 2018/19, down nearly 16 percent from the previous estimate, after heavy rainfall hit yields in the top two growing states, the state-run Coffee Board said on Wednesday.

India, which is famous as a tea producer, is also the world's No. 6 coffee grower, mainly churning out the robusta beans used to make instant coffee. It also produces some of the more expensive arabica variety.

The country had been expected to harvest a record crop of 380,000 tonnes, but heavy rainfall in Karnataka and Kerala - the top two producing states - hit plantations in July and August 2018, the board said in a statement.

India is likely to produce 224,500 tonnes of robusta in the marketing year ending on Sept. 30, down 17 percent from the previous estimate, the board said.

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Arabica output is expected to fall 13.6 percent from the previous forecast to 95,000 tonnes, it added.

The country's coffee exports could drop 8 percent to 230,000 tonnes in 2019 due to lower production, the head of an industry body said in October.

India exports three-quarters of its production. Italy, Germany and Belgium are the main buyers of India's crop, paying a premium over global prices.

(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav; Editing by Mark Potter)