Category: Leaf

  • Waste Not, Want Not

    Waste Not, Want Not

    Photos: Taco Tuinstra

    Atlas Agri wants to help Zimbabwe achieve its volumes by reducing post-harvest losses.

    By Taco Tuinstra

    Anybody who has worked in the trade knows that leaf tobacco can be a hairy business. Changing weather patterns, mounting regulations and cutthroat competition keep merchants on their toes. But few dealers will have experienced the industry’s hirsute dynamics as intimately as the people that built Atlas Agri. Not only did its management team get the company up and running in record time; they also vowed to refrain from shaving until they had bought 20 million kg.

    The idea for Atlas Agri arose when a group of like-minded tobacco veterans sat down and agreed that the time was right to establish a new company. Tobacco was in short supply globally, partly due to miscalculations of how Covid-19 would impact cigarette consumption (it went up instead of down). In Zimbabwe, the cabinet had just approved the Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan, which, among other things, calls for a significant crop boost. “There was lots of opportunity,” says Atlas Agri Managing Director Alex Mackay, who previously served as CEO of leaf operations at Premium Tobacco International. “It just made sense.”

    Atlas Agri incorporated in June last year—just in time to participate in Zimbabwe’s 2022–2023 crop cycle—and went to work immediately. The company set up an office and tobacco receiving/storage area in Harare in the cavernous halls of the Boka Tobacco Floors off of Simon Mazarodze Road. With an eye on future expansion into additional markets, Dubai made sense as the seat of Atlas Agri’s global headquarters.

    The startup process was made easier by the facts that the company’s leaders knew each other from previous engagements and had extensive experience in the tobacco business. In addition to Mackay, the management team includes Geoff Martin, who oversees finance and administration; Peter Kockott, who leads the agronomy department; and Eric Le Patourel, who is in charge of operations. International sales are coordinated from Dubai by Global Chief Finance Officer Michael Rust and Global Sales Executive Albert Edwards, whose career includes senior positions at Premium Tobacco, Imperial Brands and Limbe Leaf Tobacco Co.

    A hairy business:  Several members of the Atlas Agri team vowed to refrain from shaving until the company had bought 20 million kg.

    Brandon Palmer
    Benjamin Edwards
    Craig Dollar
    Craig Bydawell
    Dylan Jones
    Ross Mackay
    Jordan Allatt

    Supporting Farmers

    Atlas Agri’s experience also helped it quickly recruit farmers. Many growers remembered the company’s representatives from their roles at other leaf buyers, creating instant trust. Another factor driving growers’ enthusiasm, according to Kockott, was the fact that Atlas Agri offered them a well-thought-out package. Because most small farmers in Zimbabwe lack the means to finance their operations, contractors provide them with inputs ahead of the season and recover the cost after the tobacco has been grown. The system works if implemented carefully but also carries risks. In some cases, growers have been unable to repay their loans. Atlas Agri aims to prevent defaults by lending growers a practical input package without unnecessary fills and high-cost items. “It all comes down to debt bondage,” says Mackay. “Once you have a farmer who is less beholden to the contractor, he has a better chance of repaying his loan and to profit.”

    The strategy paid off. Despite its relatively late start last year, Atlas Agri signed contracts more than 15,000 farmers. Once the season got underway, the company kept supporting its growers. “We did not just give them a contract and then waited six months to collect the product,” says Mackay. Traveling in four-wheel drive vehicles and on motorbikes, Atlas Agri’s agronomy team frequently ventured into the countryside to assist its contracted farmers with agronomic advice. Such trips were made not only by junior leaf technicians but also by upper management, allowing growers to interact directly with company officials whose rank may have kept them in the office if they had worked for other tobacco buyers. “That personal touch—that has been a strong point of our approach,” says Mackay, borrowing a slogan popularized by Souza Cruz in Brazil.

    Due to inadequate infrastructure and other limitations, Zimbabwe’s small-scale growers lose up to 50 percent of their crops.

    Reducing Field Losses

    In addition to supporting its growers and serving its customers, Atlas Agri is eager to help Zimbabwe achieve the goals of its Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan. As Minister of Agriculture Anxious Masuka explained in Tobacco Reporter earlier this year (see “The Man Behind the Plan,” Tobacco Reporter, May 2023), the country aims to preside over a tobacco industry worth $5 billion by 2025. Part of that growth is to be achieved by moving beyond green leaf and processed tobacco into value-added products such as cut rag and cigarettes.

    Opportunities for such expansion, however, depend heavily on the willingness of international tobacco firms to invest in Zimbabwe—a factor outside of the nation’s control. This means that much of the desired income will likely have to be realized by bringing more leaf to market. The transformation plan aims for a 300 million kg crop by 2025—70 million kg more than its farmers were expected to deliver this year.

    One of the ways in which Atlas Agri hopes to boost production is by reducing growers’ post-harvest losses. Following a massive land reform program at the turn of the century, Zimbabwe’s tobacco sector is dominated by small-scale farmers. Whereas in 1998, the crop was produced by 1,500 commercial growers and fewer than 1,000 smallholders, the industry now comprises about 144,000 small farmers and between 300 and 400 commercial operations.

    Unlike their commercial counterparts, who are heavily mechanized with tractors, irrigation systems and forced-air curing tunnels, the smallholders run barebones operations. Due to inadequate infrastructure and other limitations, Zimbabwe’s small-scale growers may lose up to 50 percent of their crops, according to the Tobacco Research Board (see “The Scientific Approach,” Tobacco Reporter, June 2023).

    One of the major constraints is curing barn capacity. Many smallholders grow more tobacco than their barns can accommodate. Tobacco that ripens after the curing barn has filled up is often left to rot in the field. While this could be remedied by building more curing barns, Atlas Agri considers this a less-than-ideal solution for small growers. Erecting such structures, the company argues, will not only push farmers deeper into debt but also boost demand for wood as the fuel to cure tobacco and additional bricks, contributing to deforestation.

    So instead of constructing additional curing barns, Atlas Agri is encouraging its contracted farmers to build inexpensive, natural air-curing systems, known in southern Africa as a “Chigaffas.” Already used to cure burley in many countries, a Chigaffa is a simple, inexpensive wooden structure with racks to dry tobacco and a roof made out of plastic tarp or thatch. “We say to our farmers, if your curing barn is empty, reap straight into the curing barn,” says Kockott. “But if your curing barn is full, instead of waiting for the barn to be empty, by which time your tobacco in the field becomes overripe, reap on the day you are supposed to and put it in the Chigaffa.”

    The purpose of the Chigaffa is to alleviate pressure on the barn and prevent tobacco from sitting too long in the fields. “If you put overripe tobacco in the barn—by the time it is wilted and ready to fix color, it will have turned brown, so you have lost quality and yields,” says Kockott. Using a Chigaffa allows farmers to market tobacco that would otherwise be lost. Even if the Chigaffa leaf does not attract premium prices, the potential for additional volumes presents opportunity for additional income.

    While some have expressed concern that the Chigaffa system will bring lower quality tobaccos to market, Mackay notes that those styles are in line with prevailing customer preferences. “Global demand for value and super-value styles currently exceeds that for top quality tobacco,” he points out. Another advantage: Using the Chigaffa reduces the time spent in the traditional curing barn by a few days, lowering wood consumption, thus contributing to sustainability—a fact that should appeal to international customers, who expect their tobacco to be grown according to strict environmental, social and governance requirements.

    Convinced by the merits of natural air curing, the Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board endorsed the system earlier this year. “The introduction of this natural Virginia tobacco product is in line with the Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan,” the regulator wrote in a press note. “By producing more natural Virginia tobacco […] we believe the local tobacco industry will generate a wider range of qualities for customers on the global market, creating demand and encouraging investment for the ultimate longevity of the Zimbabwean tobacco industry.”

    Just by reducing post-harvest losses, a small farmer could increase his or her volume by up to a quarter, according to Atlas Agri. If the entire smallholder sector optimized its operations, it would go a long way toward achieving the 300 million kg proposed in the transformation plan. “Think about it,” says Mackay. “Smallholders produced approximately 200 million kg out of this year’s 260 million-plus kg crop. If they can add a quarter to what they already deliver, the country will be quite close to the desired 300 million kg—without claiming a single additional hectare of farmland or increasing pressure on our woodlands.”

    Even if the Chigaffa leaf does not attract premium prices, it still represents potential for additional income to the farmer.

    Beyond Tobacco

    In addition to boosting tobacco volumes, Atlas Agri is exploring complimentary crops, such as soya and cotton, to enhance farmer viability. Already, the company has provided its contracted growers with inputs for 700 hectares of soya. According to Mackay, diversification will not only improve farmers’ financial security but also rehabilitate their soils through better crop rotation. This in turn should ease the pressure from pests and disease, reducing the need for chemical crop protection agents, thereby creating a more sustainable product.

    Atlas Agri has made tremendous progress since its incorporation last year. “We are starting to reap the fruits of our heavy lifting,” says Mackay. “It’s incredibly gratifying when you see farmers smiling because you know you have exceeded expectations.” When the business hit its 20 million kg milestone in May 2023, the company’s by now shaggy crew broke out the champagne, along with the razors, and took advantage of a rare opportunity to unwind—but only momentarily because it’s time already to start thinking about the next crop.

    Like this season, the upcoming production cycle will throw up plenty of regulatory, environmental and competitive hurdles. If Atlas Agri’s first year of operation is any indication, however, the team members will overcome them with their trademark combination of passion, professionalism and persistence, ready to take each of the challenges on their freshly shaven chins.

    What a difference 20 million kg makes: Upon achieving their buying target, Atlas Agri’s team paid a well-deserved visit to the barber.

    Banjamin Edwards
    Brandon Palmer
    Craig Dollar
    Craig Bydawell
    Dylan Jones
    Ross Mackay
    Jordan Allatt
  • A Mixed Bag

    A Mixed Bag

    Image: Taco Tuinstra

    Growers continue to struggle with rising production cost, but demand for tobacco remains firm.

    By Stefanie Rossel

    Ivan Genov

    Challenges abound for the global leaf sector, but there are also opportunities for tobacco farmers, Ivan Genov, manager of tobacco industry analysis at the International Tobacco Growers Association (ITGA), told participants in the organization’s recent regional meeting in Salta, Argentina.

    The ITGA recently completed a survey among growers and other stakeholders. “The rising cost of production was consistently put as the primary economic concern in the Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe as well as the Middle East regions,” Genov told Tobacco Reporter. “This dynamic is accelerating and has been particularly worrying in the last two to three marketing seasons. The situation is made worse by other underlying factors, including inflation, price rises of key commodities and growing international tensions, making even more challenging the navigation in global supply chains. All these factors contribute to bringing up the general costs of living and create a natural obstacle in tobacco production.”

    In Brazil, for example, the cost of production increased by more than 30 percent on an annual basis; in Zimbabwe, it was more than 20 percent. In most of the leading tobacco producing and exporting countries, the cost of production has been growing at double-digit figures, according to Genov.

    In addition, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has impacted the availability and pricing of fertilizers. “The war in Ukraine, along with the massive humanitarian disaster, is also highly problematic in the wider agricultural aspect,” said Genov. “A lot of African and lower income markets are highly dependent on agrifood commodities imported from Russia and Ukraine; wheat was highlighted by the United Nations in the beginning of the conflict. The war has created a shortage of fertilizers as well as a spike in pricing as alternative production routes have to be exploited—often much farther away. This adds to the rising costs of production.”

    Worsening U.S.-China relations, meanwhile, could result in more trade barriers for leaf tobacco and other commodities. Inflation pressures, meanwhile, have added to the general expectation of a prolonged period of crisis. There is consensus that cigarette consumption has peaked and is now declining in line with tobacco in the long term. Novel alternatives such as heated-tobacco products contain less tobacco per stick than traditional cigarettes, whereas e-cigarettes require no tobacco at all. The EU Supply Chain Due Diligence Act will bring about more requirements in each step of the production process.

    All tobacco origins suffered from significantly increased cost of production. | Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Resilient Farmers

    Despite these challenges, there are still opportunities for tobacco growers, the survey showed. Since late 2020, leaf has been in undersupply worldwide—an issue that is openly discussed by leaf merchants and international manufacturers. “Some of them have the lowest uncommitted inventories in their recent histories,” said Genov. “The case around burley is particularly relevant. For example, the 2022 crop in Malawi—one of the key markets for the variety—was very short. As a result, we believe it is natural to expect growth in pricing that goes above the cost of production increases [see “Back to Normal,” Tobacco Reporter, June 2023]. The alternative is to see further drops in the global tobacco growers base as cultivating the crop will become even more challenging. We have to remember that this happens on top of issues with generational continuation and the move away from rural areas by young people.”

    Stable producers who are well prepared for the underlying threats will enjoy demand for their products, according to Genov. “A lot of tobacco growers have been in the business for several generations,” he said. “A great number of them have a well-diversified land, stable channels and partners for their inputs and huge experience in planning. In the face of leaf shortage and high demand, this surely means quality production is very likely to be realized. Unfortunately, in some cases, diversification is not as easy. It is not only about time and financing but the opportunities of the market. In certain countries, tobacco is the best bet. Small-scale farmers are often left with the least support; they do not have the capacity and time to safeguard against all threats. This is why support from all stakeholders in the sector is essential. Small-scale farmers must not be treated as suppliers of low-price production only.”

    Most tobacco farmers are exceptionally resilient, Genov stated. “They have worked in a regulations-heavy environment for decades. Nevertheless, it is still essential to receive support and real understanding from local and international authorities and to be included in the conversations that decide their futures. In addition, tobacco growers’ needs are often not dissimilar to those farmers caring about other field crops.”

    Support Needed

    According to Genov, one way to assist growers is through diversification efforts, especially in the markets that are heavily dependent on tobacco. Unfortunately, he said, the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) Article 17, which urges member states to find viable alternatives for tobacco growers, has delivered few tangible results on this front. ITGA has put Article 17 at the center of its efforts in 2023 to ensure that the issue is taken seriously during the Conference of the Parties to the FCTC in Panama later this year. The organization urges stakeholders to remember that the livelihoods of millions of people depend on tobacco growers.

    Tobacco growing countries will also need assistance with issues such as deforestation, which has been a big problem, especially in Africa. “Finding and financing alternative fuel sources that are more environmentally sustainable is critical,” said Genov. “There are some projects being run in this area. Last November, ITGA organized an awareness bringing campaign about deforestation in three of the leading tobacco growing regions in Zimbabwe. We are pressing ahead with expanding the project to other regions by the end of the year.”

    One of the areas that should be prioritized is water management, according to the results of the ITGA’s survey. “For example, in Brazil, one of the key international leaf markets, there is low water storage capacity,” said Genov. “Water conservation is going to climb on the agenda in the years to come. If we include the urgent social issues that are often faced by tobacco growers, like poverty, lack of opportunity for the youth, child labor and inadequate healthcare, we can see that the sector still needs a lot of attention.”

    Increasingly, tobacco growers have to cope with the consequences of climate change, which makes it harder to plan agricultural activities. “This makes services like insurance and the importance of forward planning even more significant,” Genov stressed. While weather variations can always be expected, there were some abnormal events in the last few seasons: “In 2022, Malawi was hit by Cyclones Gombe and Anna while Cyclone Mandous affected the crop in Andhra Pradesh in India. In the Americas, certain origins, like in the Dominican Republic, report changes in the traditional rainy season while in Europe, there were periods of prolonged drought. In Cuba, arguably the most striking example, Hurricane Ian obliterated the crop used to produce premium cigars.”

    Cost of Production

    In his presentation, Genov also reviewed global leaf production, citing data from Universal Leaf. Driven by increases in the U.S., Brazil and Zimbabwe, flue-cured Virginia (FCV) rebounded slightly, to 1.73 billion kg, in 2021. In 2022, the FCV crop excluding China was again short, down to 1.64 billion kg. Brazil’s season, for instance, finished last year with 60 million kg less than in 2021. For 2023, leading markets are expected to increase production, which could lead to increased supply at the global level, Genov said.

    In Zimbabwe, production fell by 3 percent in 2022 to just over 200 million kg but was still higher than expected due to drought and the late rains improving the crop. The cost of production rose faster than tobacco prices, however, and is likely to continue increasing next year. “Farmers’ viability over the last two years has been significantly reduced,” said Genov. “In future, pricing will remain a crucial element in seeing which farmers stick with tobacco and which will move entirely to other crops. It is interesting to note here that Zimbabwe’s government has an ambitious target to stimulate production to 300 million kg by 2025 [see Tobacco Reporter’s special report on the Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan in May 2023]. Given the current progress of the market, this seems highly unlikely.”

    In the U.S., production cost put severe pressure on growers who are increasingly turning to other commodities. “Labor, energy and fertilizer cost will flag this particularly,” said Genov. “2022 has been said to be the most expensive crop to be grown in U.S. history.” For 2023, U.S. producers expect increasing demand with no relief in cost of production, Genov said, and it appears that China is back on the market.

    In China, meanwhile, tobacco production has been growing exponentially. The FCV crop reached an estimated 1.91 billion kg in 2022 and is expected to increase to 2 billion kg this year. Tobacco imports overcame their Covid-related drop of 2020 in 2021, according to Genov, who expects demand to remain strong based on local consumption patterns.

    Burley production decreased from 407 million kg in 2021 to 360 million kg in 2022. The crop is anticipated to bounce back to 460 million kg in 2023.

    Oriental production dropped from 154 million kg in 2020 to 119 million kg in 2021 and stagnated in 2022 at 117 million kg. Production of dark air-cured slightly increased from 108 million kg in 2021 to 113 million kg one year on. For the two latter crops, there is no estimate for 2023 yet.

  • Minister Expresses Support for Tobacco at ITGA Meeting

    Minister Expresses Support for Tobacco at ITGA Meeting

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Zimbabwe’s minister of agriculture, Anxious Masuka, opened the International Tobacco Growers Association’s (ITGA) 2023 Africa regional meeting June-28-29 expressing strong support for the tobacco sector

    Growers’ representatives from four of the leading tobacco producing markets in Africa—Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe—gathered in Harare to debate the challenges and opportunities facing their sector. Participants requested the support of their governments in the face of multiple threats affecting tobacco production, which brings considerable socioeconomic benefits to the region. Among other topics, they discussed growers’ sustainability efforts and the situation of in their respective markets.

    Highlighting the central role of tobacco growing in Zimbabwe’s economy, Masuka provided details about the country’s Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan, which is supposed to increase value addition of the crop and improve local earnings (also see “The Man Behind the Plan,” Tobacco Reporter, May 2023). Masuka aims at record volumes, record earnings and record average prices for tobacco growers. He stated that the actions of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) are “ill-informed and ill-timed.” “Tobacco in Zimbabwe is an important crop and we are not making any apologies about it,” said Masuka.

    Ryan Swales, the president of Zimbabwe Tobacco Association (ZTA), highlighted the important opportunity presented by the meeting in debating the regional and national issues, given the specific challenges attached to the market, predominantly in sustainability.

    Governments need to look at farmers as their main strategic partners and support their efforts.

    ITGA’s President Jose J. Aranda called on governments to support growers in their sustainable tobacco production efforts as the livelihoods of millions of people around the world depend on it. Tobacco growing, he said, brings valuable contributions to local economies in the form of labor, income, and further opportunities for growth. Aranda also emphasized that tobacco growers operate within a legal framework. “Governments need to look at farmers as their main strategic partners and support their efforts.”

    During the Open Session, participants were able to follow presentations about the current developments in the global leaf market, with focus on African production and pricing, the outlook of the regulatory environment and possible implications for growers, along with a detailed analysis of the ITGA 2023 Market Survey, which highlights the economic, social and environmental challenges for growers in all leading tobacco growing areas. Finally, there were two comprehensive debate sessions with key stakeholders in the four represented markets discussing sustainable tobacco productions and the efforts made to overcome the pressing challenges of the region—cost of production, deforestation, climate change, poverty and lack of opportunities for the youth.

    The ITGA also highlighted its World Understanding Tobacco Farming Day campaign. Aranda urged the sector to work together against the demonization of tobacco growing. ITGA is raising awareness about the realities of tobacco farming to stop the unfounded claims by the WHO FCTC in their World No Tobacco Day.

  • Tobacco Production Up in Tanzania

    Tobacco Production Up in Tanzania

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Tanzania produced 125 million kg in 2023, up from 60 million kg in 2022, reports the Xinhua News Agency

    Addressing the fifth general meeting of the Tobacco Cooperative Joint Enterprise in the Morogoro region, Stanley Mnozya, the director general of the Tanzania Tobacco Board, said his organization has taken measures to increase the production of the crop to 231 million kg in 2024.

    The increase is in line with the objectives of Tanzania’s ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi, which wants the country to produce 250 million kg of tobacco by 2025.

    Mnozya attributed this year’s increase in tobacco production to the emergence of new buyers on the markets. There are now 11 companies purchasing tobacco in Tanzania.

    TCJE Chair Ntezilyo John said Tanzania tobacco cultivation is facing a number of challenges, including delayed payments and a lack of subsidized fertilizers.

  • Zimbabwe Sales Surpass $800 Million

    Zimbabwe Sales Surpass $800 Million

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Since auction and contract floors opened in March, Zimbabwe has sold more than 270 million kg of tobacco worth $817 million, reports The Herald.

    The target this year was 230 million kg compared to last year’s 212 million kg.

    Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB) data shows that this year’s sales have increased 52 percent from 2022 sales of 177 million kg during the same period.

    The highest price at the contract floors was $6.10 per kilogram while the highest price at the auction floors was $4.99 per kilogram.  

    “The prices are hovering around $3.02 per kilogram, and we hope they will improve as the marketing season progresses. If the prices continue like this, we will manage to go back to the field again,” said Marjory Munengerwa of Rusape.

    So far, farmers have been happy with the marketing season and the fast, fair payments. TIMB has been working to create a marketing season without side marketing.

    Zimbabwe generates $1 billion annually from tobacco exports to over 60 countries around the world, among them China, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Belgium, the United Kingdom, the United States, Brazil, South Africa, Botswana, Malawi, Egypt, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique and Lesotho.

     A new target of 300 million kg per year has been set with plans to transform the sector into a $5 billion industry by 2025.

  • Pakistan Tobacco Growers Reject Price

    Pakistan Tobacco Growers Reject Price

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Tobacco growers in Pakistan have rejected the per kilogram price set by Pakistan Tobacco Company and Philip Morris International Pakistan, reports Dawn.

    The companies offered PKR425 ($1.48) per kilogram for Virginia tobacco, according to Arif Khan, central president of Ittehad Kashtkaran, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Khan said this is unrealistic due to the rising prices of fertilizer, labor, pesticides and other costs.

    The Economic Coordination Council of Federal Ministry for Commerce set the minimum price at PKR310 per kilogram.

    “In the open market, businessmen and small companies are purchasing tobacco at PKR500 per kilogram, offering PKR76 more than the multinational companies,” said Khan, who also noted that if the companies did not increase prices, the growers would be forced to stage protest in front of the local offices.

    “After Eid, we will evolve a joint line of action,” said Liaqat Yousafzai, central president of the Tobacco Growers Association Pakistan, who also said they appealed to growers to stop taking produce to the companies’ buying centers.

  • 22nd Century Produces Homogenized Leaf

    22nd Century Produces Homogenized Leaf

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    22nd Century Group has successfully produced homogenized tobacco leaf (HTL) sheet using VLN reduced-nicotine content tobacco, demonstrating a reduced-nicotine content pathway for additional large markets, such as heat-not-burn products, and as the binder or wrapper for machine-made cigars.

    “It’s time for the industry to offer adult smokers a true alternative to highly addictive nicotine products in every format,” said John Miller, president of tobacco products for the company, in a statement. “HTL is critical to the fast-growing heat-not-burn product category, where a VLN 95 percent reduced-nicotine content HTL would be a compelling alternative to the nicotine-laden tobaccos commonly used in these products. HTL is also commonly used as the binder and wrapper in the high-volume cigar market due to its greater mechanical resistance and uniformity as compared to whole tobacco leaves.”

    “Conventional tobacco products still seek to create and sustain nicotine addiction to generate sales,” said James A. Mish, CEO. “Even alternatives to conventional smoking products, such as vaping and e-cigarettes, perpetuate sales through nicotine addiction rather than giving consumers a real choice. 22nd Century wants to provide a true alternative that allows users to take control of their consumption habit once and for all by breaking the chains of nicotine addiction.”

    VLN HTL sheet product could be manufactured and sold as a raw material input or produced under license for companies interested in offering reduced-nicotine content and nonaddictive products.

  • Drought-Tolerant Tobacco Introduced

    Drought-Tolerant Tobacco Introduced

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Research Board (TRB) has developed and released four drought-resistant tobacco varieties, according to News Day.

    The new varieties will help farmers who have been planting varieties not suited for their areas, according to Frank Magama, TRB CEO. They will also help the country meet its goal of producing 300 million kg by 2025.

    “Just to show you that we haven’t abandoned tobacco, I think in March, we released four varieties that are already in the market, and these varieties actually fit into the Tobacco Transformation Plan where we need to go to 300 million kilograms,” Magama said.

    “Already, you see that it’s quite possible, but what we have done with these varieties is that they are drought tolerant.

    “So, they will be able to safeguard the yields that we are currently obtaining within the tobacco growing districts, you know the usual one, but more importantly, we have put more hectarage in the amount of tobacco that can be grown.

    “Now, we have a belt around Masvingo where growers used to use the wrong varieties. They can grow this profitable (one), and we have a belt in Lower Gweru, and we have a belt in Matabeleland where there is a concentration of growers that are doing tobacco, and they are also suffering from wrong varieties.

    “But with these varieties, what it means is we have marginally increased the area under tobacco production by providing varieties that will actually be profitable in those areas.

    “And again, that fits within the scope of 300 million kilograms. Obviously, there are a number of things that we can do to make sure that we can constantly get the 300 million kilograms without necessarily increasing the hectarage itself. So, increasing hectarage wasn’t part of getting to the 300 million kilograms, but it was part of safeguarding the yield in the current tobacco production zones, including so-called marginal areas.”

    Tobacco exports in the country reached $407 million as of April 30, 2023, compared to $308 million by April 13, 2022.

  • Zimbabwe Leaf Sales Approach $800 Million

    Zimbabwe Leaf Sales Approach $800 Million

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Since Zimbabwe’s tobacco auction and contract floors opened in March, at least 256.6 million kg of leaf worth $774.4 million have been sold, according to ZimLive.com. During the same period last year, 165.4 million kg of leaf worth $500.5 million were sold.

    The government’s target for tobacco sales was 230 million kg.

    The increase in sales has been attributed to good rains and an increase in farmers planting tobacco.

    According to the Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board, sales have increased 54.72 percent from the same period in 2022.

    The average price at auction and contract floors was $3.02 per kilogram, with the highest price at $6.20 per kilogram and the lowest price at $0.10. Rejected bales rose to 88,057 this year from 63,842 in 2022.

    “We have surpassed our 2022/2023 target of 230 million kg and are bound to break the all-time record of 259 million kg,” said John Basera, lands and agriculture permanent secretary.

  • Special Report: Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Transformation Plan

    Special Report: Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Transformation Plan

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Convinced that its earnings fall short of potential, Zimbabwe has set out to capture more value from its tobacco business.

    By growing the crop and moving up the value chain, the country aims to build a $5 billion tobacco industry by 2025.

    Will it succeed? Read our special report about the challenges and opportunities associated with Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan.

    The Man Behind the Plan

    Zimbabwe’s minister of agriculture, Anxious Jongwe Masuka, explains how the country will build a $5 billion tobacco industry by 2025.

    Failure to Launch

    Zimbabwe’s attempt to diversify into cannabis is proving more challenging than some anticipated.

    Great Expectations

    Cavendish Lloyd has started growing low-nicotine flue-cured tobacco in Zimbabwe for shisha applications.

    TIMB Joins GlobalG.A.P.

    Membership will assist the sector’s regulator in helping Zimbabwean leaf tobacco farmers diversify their operations.

    Gaining Momentum

    Cavendish Lloyd is eager to expand shisha tobacco production in Zimbabwe and elsewhere.

    Leaf Sales Down

    An El Nino-induced drought depressed the volumes cultivated in Zimbabwe this year.

    Zimbabwe Exports Up

    The country earned nearly 3.5 times as much from tobacco sales this month than it did in the comparable 2023 period.