Tobacco International - June 2019

Page 32

LEAF NEWS UNITED STATES A Good Start For 2019 By mid June, planting of the f lue-cured crop was nearing completion. Growers in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina were finished with setting and had begun topping, and North Carolina growers expected to finish by the fifteenth. Virginia f lue growers had about a tenth of their acreage to go as of June 10. Burley transplanting was not as far along. In the leading state, 66 percent or the crop (including dark types), had been set in the field, while in Tennessee, the number two state, 63 percent (again including dark) had been planted. Much of the flue-cured belt had suffered a hot dry spell in May, but it began raining for most in the last week of the month, culminating in some torrential storms in early June that lead to some drowning and washing. But as a whole, the crop was doing well in mid June. In Kentucky, farmers continued to battle persistent rain, planting when they could. There were a few days of dry weather in the first week of June, allowing progress. But rain moved back in towards the end of the week. A flue-cured tobacco grower in Florida (U.S.) uses a mechanical topper to remove the flowery tops from his plants in late May.

NAMIBIA Joint Leaf Venture Gets Government Green Light KATIMA MULILO—A

proposed 10,000-hectare tobacco-producing operation near Katima Mulilo in northeast Namibia has taken another regulatory step toward coming into existence, but not without objections from its detractors. Namibia Oriental Tobacco, a joint Namibian/Chinese venture, obtained government approval in mid June for clearing land for the leaf facility, which will be located in the Zambezi Region of the country and will produce tobacco and maize which will be grown in rotation. Further clearances are still required. The tobacco will be 100 percent exported. The land is to be awarded a 99-

year—lease on the property, according to press reports. One Namibian critic said the decision to award land to the Chinese is not just when Namibians seriously need land and that the country’s most fertile land is used to produce drugs and not food. “To allocate more land for tobacco than is allocated for food production is a deviation from the policy direction taken by the Namibian government through its agriculture ministry,” said Job Amupanda, leader of the youth activists, a Namibian politician and academician. The Minister of Health and Social Services, Dr. Richard Kamwi, objected that the project cut Namibian lives short. “It is very unfortunate that we

32 TOBACCO INTERNATIONAL JUNE 2019

just introduced [a] law [and] put it in practice last year July to stop smoking…but now we are planting tobacco,” he said. The Chinese Ambassador to Namibia, Xin Shunkang, insisted that the project will be beneficial to the Namibian economy as a similar project in neighboring Zimbabwe has produced good effects for that economy, according to the NAMPA news agency. “Zimbabwe’s tobacco quality is very good, and [the growers] have earned a lot of money through it,” said Zin. “So, I have suggested that Chinese companies teach Namibian farmers how to plant tobacco, for them to also earn money through this.” He added, “I want to clarify that the tobacco produced here will not be


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