Tobacco International - December 2018 | Tobacco Products International - Quarter 4, 2018

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LEAF NEWS tunities to solve problems in the pursuit of economic and national development. CTSIC executive Bai Gang said in The Standard newspaper of Harare that the introduction of the Acacia line of cigarettes is an attempt to widen their base and reach the consumers of their highly ranked products. Acting Chinese Ambassador to Zimbabwe Zhao Baogang said

that local production of cigarettes would help the Zimbabwean Chinese community, which has been spending millions to import tobacco products. “Now we can get a finished product, and that means more value addition that will create jobs for Zimbabwe’s people,” said Baogang. This year Zimbabwe country pro-

duced in excess of 200 kgs of tobacco, most of which was exported to China. Molai founded Savanna Tobacco Company in 2002, and the company re-branded as Pacific Cigarette Co. in 2017. It is the manufacturer of the Pacific brand of cigarettes, which includes Pacific Storm, one of the country’s and region’s leading cigarette brands.

UNITED STATES Future not bright for growers SPRINGFIELD, TN.—As

the year came to an end, the outlook for the major U.S. tobacco types was growing dim. Estimates of the volume of the American burley crop that is just now being marketed vary widely, but all estimates indicate that this is the smallest burley crop since records have been kept. has been projected at 90 million pounds. Daniel Green, chief operating officer of the Burley Stabilization Corporation in Springfield, Tenn., says the shortfall resulted in part from the substantial cutbacks in plantings made by growers last spring—20 percent according to USDA—but late-season rains were the major factor. But the quality of this burley crop is decent, says Green, as the last two crops were. “You could call this crop ‘low in volume but acceptable in quality’,” he says. “But much of the leaf is thin. There isn’t a lot of the good-bodied redder styles that buyers are looking for.” There was plenty of dark red leaf in the 2018 flue-cured crop, but for this type, red is undesirable. A reduction in contract offerings for this type is considered all but certain by market observers, and the Executive Vice President of the N.C tobacco growers association, Graham Boyd, predicted outright that the 2019 crop would be the smallest American flue-cured crop since records were kept.

Workers on an eastern North Carolina farm sort good leaf from bad on a conveyor belt.

26 TOBACCO INTERNATIONAL DECEMBER 2018


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