Tag: Habanos Festival

  • Breaking Through Barriers

    Breaking Through Barriers

    Photos: Timothy Donahue

    Cuba’s cigar industry is on the road to recovery after several challenging years.

    By Timothy S. Donahue

    The Cuban cigar industry made huge profits last year, but it wasn’t because it produced more cigars. While the impacts of the pandemic, the weather and the scarcity of almost everything are overwhelming, the Cuban people and its tobacco industry are finding ways to endure. The cigar industry mirrors the country as a story of overcoming adversity and sowing the seeds of a hopeful new beginning.

    When Hurricane Ian’s winds began to howl in September 2022, they caused significant damage in the Pinar del Rio region, Cuba’s most prominent tobacco-producing province. The storm eviscerated crops and flattened 90 percent of the tobacco curing barns and other farming infrastructure needed to grow tobacco. The destruction came on the heels of the Covid-19 pandemic, which had already brought the worst economic suffering Cuba had seen in decades.

    Recovery has been slow, but Cuba has endured. While this year’s tobacco crop is the worst in the written history of the island’s tobacco crops, Cuba’s newspaper, Granma, reported earlier this year that 4,776 barns have been rebuilt, and another 620 are being completed. Luis Sanchez-Harguindey, co-president of Habanos, the state-run global distributor of Cuban cigars, said during a press conference at the 24th annual Festival del Habano that Cuban growers had also focused resources on their most efficient, volume-producing farms.

    “This growth factor has also been due to the enhancement of all the supply chains and the great effort done by Tabacuba, the producers, the tobacco growers, who, after the pandemic and the hurricane, have been increasing production,” he said. “We have a better group of products [we now can produce]. And these products that we offer, of course, do not satisfy the demand for the products yet.” He explained that the combination of increased demand and lower supply has been one reason for this year’s record growth.

    As the 2023–2024 growing season closed, a representative of Grupo Empresarial Tabacuba—the state-run company charged with managing the production of Cuban tobacco and cigars—told Tobacco Reporter that only two-thirds of the pre-hurricane tobacco hectarage was used for tobacco cultivation this season. Tabacuba said it reduced its targeted goals for the 2023–2024 harvest from the planned 12,905 hectares to 10,200; however, the amount of land used to grow tobacco is expected to return to pre-hurricane levels for the 2024–2025 season.

    “Today, we have a great [percentage] of this infrastructure operating at 100 percent. This has been possible because we quickly had all the necessary resources to build a workforce, a specialized labor force that can rebuild everything that had been destroyed,” Sanchez-Harguindey said. “There are still some minimally damaged areas. It is mainly issues related to construction [acquiring supplies]. Tabacuba has a policy to concentrate production with tobacco growers that traditionally produce higher yields and better quality. This has been possible during the year 2023. The impact, the result of all this work, is unprecedented growth in revenues over 2022.”

    Getting a Boost

    Sanchez-Harguindey said that while the farms produced less tobacco in 2023, Habanos achieved a major increase in the value of its cigars due to a new pricing structure and successful promotions of exclusive brands such as Trinidad and Cohiba. “We’ve been able to compensate for that reduction in volume with value,” he said.

    Habanos earned revenues of $721 million in 2023, up 31 percent compared to the previous year. Last year, the company generated $545 million in revenue, nearly 2 percent more than in 2021. “This is a year of records,” Sanchez-Harguindey said at the Festival del Habano, which took place Feb. 26—March 1.

    The company’s products are available on five continents. During 2023, the markets that contributed most to Habanos’ sales volume were Spain, France, China, Germany and Switzerland. Habanos is owned 50 percent by the Cuban government and 50 percent by a consortium of Asian investors under the umbrella of companies called Allied Cigar Group, which is rumored to be majority-owned by HuaBoa, a major Chinese tobacco flavoring company. By region, Europe remains the leading market for Habanos, accounting for 56 percent of total sales value, followed by Asia (21 percent), the Americas (13 percent) and Africa and the Middle East (10 percent).

    In 2023, the company launched 31 new products, including Cohiba Siglo de Oro, Cohiba Ideales, Romeo y Julieta Cupidos, Hoyo de Monterrey: Monterrey No. 4, and Bolivar New Gold Medal. With its 27 marcas and a presence in more than 130 countries, Jose Maria Lopez Inchaurbe, vice president of development for Habanos, credited the company’s success to “excellence, tradition and innovation.” A more obvious answer for the revenue jump is the boost in Cuban cigar prices globally. Habanos, said Lopez Inchaurbe, has transformed the Cuban cigar into a luxurious, high-end smoke in global markets, especially in China.

    During the media portion of the festival, several reporters asked for clarification of Habanos’ revenues. Andrea Rodriguez, from the Associated Press, questioned how revenues went from 2 percent in 2022 to 30 percent this year. Lopez Inchaurbe said that there are different reasons to justify the growth. He said, “It’s a reality that after the pandemic, both the luxury market and the consumption of premium goods around the world have been increasing considerably,” and that demand has been global.

    Lopez Inchaurbe said that the company also positioned its “super-premium” segment (Cohiba and Trinidad) more prominently and promoted the brands heavily in markets where luxury cigars are in greater demand. There has also been an increase in limited-edition cigar releases. “In the year 2023, we have launched 32 new products, nine of them in the premium standard category, which is the permanent portfolio of Havana, and 22 of them are in the concept of specialties,” he explained.

    In 2022, Habanos announced a new “global pricing standard,” which massively increased the prices of Cuban cigars worldwide. The company has already announced at least two additional price increases for 2024. The price increases have significantly impacted the costs of Cuban cigars. Five years ago, the Cohiba Siglo IV, the flagship of the Cohiba brand, cost less than $60 a stick. Today, the cigar costs nearly $400 a stick in most markets. However, not all markets are treated equally.

    Store shelves in Cuba were not heavily stocked during Tobacco Reporter’s visit. Finding large-ring-gauge cigars or anything with a Cohiba or Trinidad label was also difficult. Many local cigar shops in Havana said that they had not received shipments in more than a year, and some La Casa del Habanos (LCDH) locations said that it had been at least nine months since they had a cigar delivery. For the festival, however, every shop seemed to have received shipments of varying vitolas and marcas. Many shops had the new Romeo y Julieta Cupidos, 20 for $1,600, and boxes of the new Cohiba Siglo de Oro, priced at $4,500 for 18 sticks ($250 each).

    An interesting, unusual occurrence was the introduction of a new POS system for payments during the festival. This system now allows Americans to purchase Cuban cigars (for consumption while on the island) with their U.S.-based credit cards, which has long been impossible. However, it is unclear whether this is a coincidence or if it was a permanent addition to the Cuban payment system. Tobacco Reporter was told that the new payment system is currently being used in only two of the LCDH stores in Cuba; however, it is expected to expand to all LCDH locations.

    The Featured Event

    In the past, registration for the Habanos Festival opened months before the event. However, last year, registration opened a mere 40 days before the event, and this year, Habanos gave attendees only 27 days to register. Overall, this year’s festival was better than most. The entertainment was spectacular, and the cigars were the best in the world.

    Habanos celebrated several milestones this year, including the company’s 30th anniversary, the 50th anniversary of the Quai d’Orsay brand and the 55th anniversary of the Trinidad brand. Featuring an estimated 2,200 attendees and more than 200 journalists, the festival is where Habanos showcases its assets and previews a number of its major releases every year. The festival features multiple seminars, epic dinner events centered on various brands, and a trade show with over 200 exhibitors.

    Traditionally, Tuesdays are reserved for trips to Pinar del Rio, Cuba’s legendary tobacco-growing region. While many media attendees visited the famed Vegas Robaina farm, Tobacco Reporter visited a smaller farm in San Juan y Martinez, often called the “Mecca of tobacco.” The fields looked exceptionally healthy, with broad, green leaves. The curing barns had been freshly painted, and the workers seemed vibrant and plentiful. The barns were in the process of being filled.

    This year, attendees were also allowed to roll a cigar alongside professional rollers at one of five factories. It marked the first time the festival hosted its master rolling class in the same buildings where Habanos cigars are produced. Daymi Difurniao Rodriguez, communications and marketing specialist for Habanos, said that the venue change was to allow more attendees to learn firsthand about the “Totally by Hand” production process of a Habano.

    “I wanted the press to make their own Habano so they could understand the details and intricacies involved in creating the Habanos, the world’s finest cigars,” said Difurniao Rodriguez.

    The torcedor (cigar roller) who taught the El Laguito class was quality specialist Ana Isel Mederos Cano. She is also a nominee for the Habano Woman of the Year award in the production category for the festival. She has been at El Laguito for 25 years, 11 of them as a roller and the past 14 in her current position. “I love that I have been given this opportunity to teach the art of cigar rolling to the representatives of media from around the world,” she said.

    Visitors had the opportunity to visit the La Corona, Partagas, H. Upmann and Carlos Balino factories. El Laguito was for media only. La Corona has about 750 employees, 300 of whom are dedicated rollers. The rollers produce brands such as Hoyo de Monterrey, Montecristo, Cuaba, Diplomaticos and San Cristobal de la Habana.

    The H. Upmann factory produces H. Upmann, Montecristo, and Romeo y Julieta and several sizes of Cohiba. Partagas is one of Havana’s iconic factories, and Carlos Balino is the former El Rey del Mundo factory. The legendary El Laguito is home to Habanos’ premier marcas, Cohiba and Trinidad.

    As in previous years, the Gala Dinner takes place during the final night of the Habanos Festival. It includes the presentation of the prestigious Habanos Awards and the auction of several elaborate humidors. The proceeds from the auction are donated to the Cuban Public Healthcare System.

    This year’s auction included seven humidors, one for each of the company’s six global brands: Cohiba, H. Upmann, Hoyo de Monterrey, Montecristo, Partagas and Romeo y Julieta. Additionally, one humidor was dedicated to the 55th anniversary of the Trinidad brand. Eight lots were sold for a combined €17.8 million ($19.3 million), setting a record for the auction.

    The headliner for the festival’s gala dinner was none other than the Village People. As the crowd swayed to hits such as “YMCA” and “Macho Man,” the challenges of growing and selling cigars, and surviving in the country, could be forgotten for a while.

  • Cuba Festivalgoers Roll Cigars at Factories

    Cuba Festivalgoers Roll Cigars at Factories

    Ana Isel Mederos Cano (Photos Special to Tobacco Reporter)

    Activities during the 2024 Habanos Festival usually only vary slightly. However, this year, attendees were allowed to roll a cigar alongside professional rollers at one of five factories. It marked the first time the festival hosted its master rolling class in the same buildings where Habanos cigars are produced.

    Daymi Difurniao Rodríguez, communications and marketing specialist for Habanos, said that the venue change was to allow more attendees to learn firsthand about the “Totally by Hand” production process of a Habano.

    “I wanted the press to make their own Habano so they could understand the details and intricacies involved in creating the Habanos, the world’s finest cigars,” she said.

    The torcedor (cigar roller) who taught the El Laguito class was Ana Isel Mederos Cano, main quality specialist at El Laguito. She is also a nominee for the Habano Woman of the Year award in the production category for the XXIV Habano Festival currently taking place in Havana.

    She has been at El Laguito for 25 years, 11 of them as a roller and the past 14 in her current position.

    “I love that I have been given this opportunity to teach the art of cigar rolling to the representatives of media from around the world,” she told Tobacco Reporter.

    The venue change was a welcome addition, according to several festival attendees. A seasoned festival media participant, Nicholas Syris of LH Cigars and several cigar podcasts, who also rolled at El Laguito, said the personal attention from the professional rollers helped festival goers learn the challenging art of rolling cigars better than in a large conference room setting.

    “It was really good. It was a nice addition to the festival,” he said. “I would say many more people rolled a smokable cigar than previous editions of the festival.”

    Visitors had the opportunity to visit La Corona, Partagás, H. Upmann and Carlos Baliño. El Laguito was for media only.

    La Corona has about 750 employees, 300 of which are dedicated rollers. The rollers produce brands such as Hoyo de Monterrey, Montecristo, Cuaba, Diplomaticos and San Cristobal de la Habana.

    At the H. Upmann Factory, H. Upmann, Montecristo, and Romeo y Julieta, and sometimes several sizes of Cohiba are produced. Partagas is one of Havana’s iconic factories and Carlos Baliño is the former El Rey del Mundo factory.

    Tobacco Reporter was only permitted to attend El Laguito, the legendary home where many of Habanos’ premier marcas are produced.

    Festival roller trainees were given a wooden board to roll, a “chaveta” tobacco leaf cutting blade, some vegetable glue, and an apron. Several factory rollers made rounds around the room helping festival attendees roll their cigars.

    “I love this new idea,” said Brooks Whittington with Halfwheel, a major industry cigar information website.  “While the rolling competition has always been a favorite part of the festival for me, getting to roll the cigars at the actual factory we were visiting took the experience to the next level.”

    Many other attendees said they hope the tradition continues. The 2024 Habanos Festival is being held in Havana from Feb. 26 – March 1.

  • Cigar Lovers Gear Up for Habano Festival

    Cigar Lovers Gear Up for Habano Festival

    Photo: Habanos

    Havana is decked out to welcome experts and premium tobacco enthusiasts at the 24th Habano Festival, to be held from Feb. 26-March 1, 2024. This year, the festival not only honors the rich heritage and tradition of Cuban tobacco with special celebrations for the anniversaries of renowned brands such as Quai D’Orsay and Trinidad, but will also look back on 30 years of success for Corporacion Habanos.

    The Festival will kick off with the opening of the trade fair, a key meeting point for industry professionals, manufacturers of premium products and artisans, which this year welcomes 85 companies from 11 countries. That same night, the Club Habana will be the venue for the welcome evening, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Corporacion Habano.

    The Quai D’Orsay brand will be the star of the mid-week Evening at the Cubanacán Protocol Lounge in El Laguito. During the event, attendees will participate in a tribute to the brand’s 50th anniversary and discover this special vitola, in its world premiere presentation.

    The Gala Evening will take place in Hall C of the Pabexpo Fairgrounds. This will mark the beginning of the “Trinidad Year,” during which its 55th anniversary will be celebrated, and some of the most important launches for the brand will be enjoyed. On this last night, as on previous occasions, awards will be presented to the winners of the final of the Habanos World Challenge contest as well as to the winners of the long-awaited Habanos Awards, a worldwide recognition to those who in 2023 supported Habanos the most in terms of communication, business, and production. The final highlight will be the traditional Humidor Auction, which this year will feature novelties for attendees, and whose proceeds will go, as usual, to support the Cuban Public Health System.

    The traditional visits to plantations will take place in the zone of Vuelta Abajo, in the Pinar del Río, recognized worldwide as the best land to grow tobacco. In addition, attendees will have the opportunity to visit the Habanos factories of La Corona, Partagás, H. Upmann and Carlos Baliño, where they will be able to learn first-hand about the “Totally Handmade” Habano-making process and take part in a Habano-rolling master class in which they will be able to make their own Habano.

    The international seminar will feature presentations such as “Two Cities United by Habanos,” focusing on the Quai D’Orsay brand, and the panel “Trinidad: Past, Present and Future” which will delve into one of Habanos’ most prestigious brands. Besides, exclusive pairings will be offered, such as Taittinger champagne with Habanos Trinidad, Quai D’Orsay and San Cristóbal de Havana. Or the very popular Habanos Moments with the best rums and the finest wines. The seminar will close with the final of the Habanos World Challenge contest, where aficionados will be able to put their Habano knowledge and skills to the test to prove they are the most knowledgeable as far as the universe of Habanos is concerned.

  • Registration Opens for 2024 Habano Festival

    Registration Opens for 2024 Habano Festival

    Registration for the 2024 Habano Festival is now available through an online accreditation system at https://registrations.habanos.com. Those hopeful to attend can review all activities and make a payment online with a credit card.

    Typically, registration for the event happens in November of the previous year. This year, registration was delayed by approximately two months. No reason was given by Habanos for the delay.

    The registration period for the Habano Festival will be open from January 30th to February 12th or until the slots available are exhausted.

    “Once payment has been made, you will receive an email with a QR code which you may present it per activity, either on your phone or printed, along with the physical invitation given to you at Palco Hotel, Convention Center, Havana,” the release states. “Thank you for your interest; we look forward to seeing you at the most important Premium tobacco event in the world: the Habano Festival.”

    The events and costs are:

    • Welcome Evening — €530 ($574) — Event commemorating the 30th anniversary of Habanos S.A. to be held at Club Havana;
    • Visit to Plantations in the Pinar del Río region — €170 ($184)
    • International Seminar — €425 ($460);
    • Mid-week Evening — €745 ($807)— Event celebrating 50th anniversary of Quai D’Orsay brand to be held at the El Laguito Protocol Room;
    • Visit to Habanos Factories — €200 ($216);
    • Gala Evening — €1,325 ($1,436) — Dedicated to the 55th anniversary of the Trinidad brand to be held at Pabexpo.

    The exclusive cigar event is to be held in Havana from Feb. 26 – to March 1, 2024.

    Payments in Cuba can also be placed through Havanatur, according to Habanos. For further information, email Havanatur at eventos@havanatur.cu

    Habanos, S.A., the state-run distributor of global Cuban cigars, said in a release that its annual event is “in an international and exclusive atmosphere,” and it will include a wide-ranging program of activities combining the knowledge of the Habano and the exciting culture, including the ending final evening gala dinner and famed humidor auction.

    “In this XXIV Edition, the best specialists, distributors and aficionados will enjoy all the activities that, along with the best gastronomy and music, have made this famous event: visits to renowned Habanos factories, plantations, seminars with interesting lectures, exclusives pairings, contests and three very special nights where they will get a sneak preview of the latest Habanos, S.A. novelties,” the release states.

    Habanos, S.A. is already “working to make this event memorable for the expectations of aficionados with the passion and magic they have come to expect from each new edition.”

  • Habanos Announces Habano Festival Dates

    Habanos Announces Habano Festival Dates

    Credit: Timothy S Donahue

    The dates for the XXIV Edition of the Habano Festival, have been announced. The exclusive cigar event is to be held in Havana from Feb. 26 – to March 1, 2024.

    Habanos, S.A., the state-run distributor of global Cuban cigars, said in a release that its annual event is “in an international and exclusive atmosphere,” and it will include a wide-ranging program of activities combining the knowledge of the Habano and the exciting culture, including the ending final evening gala dinner and famed humidor auction.

    “In this XXIV Edition, the best specialists, distributors and aficionados will enjoy all the activities that along with the best gastronomy and music have made this famous event: visits to renowned Habanos factories, plantations, seminars with interesting lectures, exclusives pairings, contests and three very special nights where they will get a sneak preview of the latest Habanos, S.A. novelties,” the release states. 

    Habanos, S.A. is already “working to make this event memorable for the expectations of aficionados with the passion and magic that they have come to expect from each new edition.”

    More details on the Habano Festival will be announced soon and registration will be open to the public.

  • Habano Festival Concludes With Gala

    Habano Festival Concludes With Gala

    Photo: Timothy Donahue

    The 23rd Habano Festival culminated March 3 with the gala dinner held at the Pabexpo Fairgrounds in Havana. Around 1,200 attendees enjoyed the night complemented by national and international music, dance and indoor fireworks. The gala was also honored by the presence of Cuban President Miguel Diaz Canel, who attended the event along with other government authorities.

    The evening paid tribute to the Partagas brand with the launch of the Linea Maestra, the brand’s most premium line, made up of three new vitolas: Origen (46 ring gauge x 154 mm length), Rito (52 ring gauge x 168 mm length) and Maestro (56 ring gauge x 132 mm length). Each of these vitolas will reach the market in a special case containing 20 units.

    For the first time in the history of the brand and the Habanos portfolio, the vitolas of this new Partagas line will be made with 100 percent tobacco grown in San Luis, in the Vuelta Abajo plantations located in the Pinar del Rio region.

    The gala night also featured a Hall of Fame that illustrated the great work of the people who have made the Habano what it is today.

    One of the highlights of the evening was the auction of the exclusive humidors dedicated to the six global Habanos brands: Cohiba, Montecristo, Romeo y Julieta, Partagas, Hoyo de Monterrey and H. Upmann. The proceeds reached a total of €11,220,000 ($11,965,309) and will be donated to the Cuban public healthcare system.

  • Habanos Revenues Reach $545 Million

    Habanos Revenues Reach $545 Million

    Credit: Timothy S. Donahue

    Habanos S.A. has announced it generated $545 million in revenue in 2022. It’s nearly a 2 percent boost over its 2021 revenue, a representative of the manufacturing and distribution arm of the Cuban cigar industry told Tobacco Reporter during its coverage of the 23rd edition of the Habano Festival on Monday.

    The company also stated that its largest markets for cigar sales are Spain, France, Germany, China and Switzerland, consecutively. These are the same five top countries as 2021, though China was listed second and France was listed fourth.

    Globally, Europe, with a 53.7 percent market share, continues to hold the top spot for regional sales, however, its percentage was the only region to experience a decline in sales. Europe is followed by the Asia-Pacific region (19.3 percent), the Americas (15.3 percent), and Africa/Middle East (11.7 percent).

    “These results reflect the perfect combination of the passion we all feel in this wonderful Habano business and the strength of our brands,” said Maritza Carrillo González and Luis Sánchez-Harguindey Pardo de Vera, co-presidents of Habanos S.A., in a press release. “They put the cherry on top of the unique tobacco that grows in this land and that offers unparalleled moments and experiences to aficionados from all over the world.”

    Habanos says it grew its worldwide network of official sales outlets by 10 percent in 2022. It also announced the current count of its cigar retail experiences as follows:

    • 17 Cohiba Atmosphere locations (20 in 2021)
    • 157 La Casa del Habano stores (160 in 2021)
    • 1,264 Habanos Specialists (1,217 in 2021)
    • 2,744 Habanos Point designated stores (2,465 in 2021)
    • 587 Habanos Lounge and Habanos Terrace locations (486 in 2021)

    Last year, Habanos S.A. announced a new “global pricing standard,” which greatly increased the prices of Cuban cigars around the world. The company has already announced at least two additional price increases for 2023.

    Habanos reported a turnover of $568 million in 2021, up 15 percent growth over the previous year.

  • Cuba Gears Up for Habanos Festival

    Cuba Gears Up for Habanos Festival

    Photo: Habanos

    Habanos is gearing up to celebrate the 23rd edition of its Habano Festival in Havana, Feb. 27 to March 3, the company announced in a press note.

    The state-run tobacco firm has prepared a host of activities, workshops, lectures and presentations to share knowledge of its tradition and value chain. It expects guests from more than 110 countries.

    The 23rd edition of the Habano Festival kicks off with the opening of the trade fair. This year’s edition brings together more than 270 exhibitors from 10 countries. That same night, Club Habana will host a Welcome Evening, which will revolve around Montecristo and its much-appreciated Línea Open.

    The mid-week evening will take place at El Laguito Protocol Room and will feature Bolívar and La Casa del Habano. It will celebrate the brand’s 121 years and the worldwide importance of the international network of franchised specialized stores with the presentation of a new vitola.

    The grand finale will be the March 3 gala dinner at Pabexpo. This evening will be dedicated to Partagás. One of the most important moments of the festival will be the Habanos Awards Ceremony and the traditional humidor auction, whose proceeds will go, as is customary, to the Cuban public health system.

    In parallel with the festival, Fernando González García, president of the Cuban Association of Vitolfilia, and Zoe Nocedo, member of the association, will present a seminar at the Havana Convention Center, titled “The Partagás brand as seen through Vitolfilia.”

    Throughout the week, the same venue will host masterclasses on the Habanos-making process, as well as tastings and pairings with different products.

    Visitors will also experience a new edition of the Habanos World Challenge in which contestants demonstrate their knowledge and mastery of the different stages of Habano making and enjoyment.

    The program of activities at the 23rd Habano Festival will be rounded out by visits to plantations, which this year will take place in in the Vuelta Abajo zone, in the Pinar del Río region, as well as visits to the Partagás and La Corona factories.

  • Habanos Cancels 2022 Cigar Festival

    Habanos Cancels 2022 Cigar Festival

    Photo: Habanos

    The 2022 Habanos Festival has been officially canceled for the second year in a row.

    “Habanos S.A. has been working to celebrate the 23rd Habanos Festival scheduled for February 2022, but we are forced to cancel said celebration due to the new epidemiological situation of the coronavirus in the world,” the company wrote on its website.

    Instead, Habanos plans to treat its fans to the Habanos World Days, a virtual event that allows premium tobacco aficionados to share experiences and enjoying the rich culture that surrounds this exclusive handcrafted product.

    This virtual meeting debuted in 2021 with more than 9,000 aficionados from over 140 countries, 200 media outlets and more than 75,000 visits for three days. The program included a visit to the Habanos virtual stand featuring a special Humidor designed in commemoration of Cohiba’s 55th anniversary. During the event, Habanos unveiled the nominees for the prestigious Habanos 2020 Awards, which recognize outstanding personalities for their work in the categories of Communication, Business and Production; and the winning aficionados  for the online version of the Habanos World Challenge International Contest, which measures general Habano knowledge in its various stages of the process, from cultivation and production to enjoyment.

    The Habanos Festival highlights Cuba’s cigar culture, with farm visits, factory tours and product samplings along with lavish entertainment.

    Read Tobacco Reporter’s review of the 2020 Habanos Festival here.

  • Aprecia esto

    Aprecia esto

    Habanos SA celebrates the Cuban cigar with a splendid party.

    By Timothy S. Donahue

    Hector Luis Prieto

    It isn’t easy. Sitting in the back corner of a tobacco field, Hector Luis Prieto told Tobacco Reporter that being a famous grower in Cuba has only made his job more complicated. It was easier when nobody knew his name. He wants to spend his time at his farm, with his family. That’s nearly impossible now that busloads of “turistas” visit his plantation almost daily.

    “The crop is my life. It’s my family’s life. It’s everything to us. Tobacco is how we survive,” says Prieto. “I rarely leave; it’s my home.” Prieto is young (45), in farmer’s years. He wakes up every morning at 4 a.m. to inspect the fields. Every morning. Every leaf. Nothing is left unseen. No plant goes untouched. His dedication is impossible to overlook.

    Prieto has to check his plants daily during the growing season, which can begin as early as late October and end sometime in February. He rises so early because he knows the tourists will be arriving soon, and once the busses start unloading, he won’t have time to manage his fields properly. Everybody wants to get their picture taken and possibly score a cigar rolled by Prieto himself. That’s a rarity nowadays; Hector only rolls for special friends. Handing me a fresh cigar, he said “aprecia esto”—appreciate this. He doesn’t plan on rolling many more. We were already smoking a cigar rolled by his friend, so this special one got put safely into a pocket.

    It wasn’t always like this. Before 2008, the year Prieto won the Habanos Man of the Year award in the production category, his farm wasn’t on the list of stops for the tour buses full of tobacco travelers. Now, Prieto’s a legend. He is the youngest man ever to win the prestigious award. That is some pretty high praise, as Prieto’s operation is in the western Cuban province of Pinar del Rio in the town of San Juan y Martinez, an insanely bumpy two-hour drive from the capital city of Havana. My companion’s face hilariously smashed against the car roof numerous times as he tried to sleep on the trip there. Prieto won the award for having a higher yield of fine wrapper tobacco than any of his neighbors in the Vuelta Abajo region, home to perhaps some of the finest tobacco farms in the world.

    Prieto isn’t alone in his love of tobacco. It’s a passion for these island people. Cuba has long been known for its exceptional cigars. Celebrating that tradition, Habanos SA, part of the state-run tobacco monopoly, has hosted the Festival del Habano for 19 years in a row now. The gathering is billed as the world’s top event for premium cigars. It is as advertised, too. It’s an intense week completely devoted to the knowledge and enjoyment of Habanos (Havana cigars) and the latest developments in the field. There is no tobacco event quite like it anywhere else in the world.

    Opening doors

    This year’s event, held from Feb. 27 to March 3, centered on the H. Upmann, Montecristo and Quai D’Orsay brands, all of which received some major additions to their portfolios during the festival. More than 2,000 participants from 50 countries attended the revelries, as well as 180 journalists and 70 companies from 11 countries. The event’s traditional trade fair includes numerous manufacturers and suppliers in the tobacco world, artisans, collectors, and suppliers of smoking accessories and luxury goods. The seminars are lumped in with the trade fair, which is held in the massive Palacio de Convenciones in Havana.

    The event began with the traditional press conference held inside Havana’s International Conference Center, where Habanos SA company executives answered questions and provided an overview of the company’s sales figures for the previous year. Nothing is ever easy in Cuba, however. Oddly, event workers would often only open one side of a double-doored entranceway, making getting into or out of the different breakout sessions a complicated mess. To be fair, they were trying to check badges as well. Life also happens on Cuban time here, meaning everything starts an hour or two late. You learn to accept these things.

    Starting off, Enrique Babot Espinosa, Habanos’ chief of market operations, told attendees that the company “reaped” $445 million worth of revenues in 2016, with 450 million units sold, accounting for 70 percent of the global market, excluding the U.S. Then, Habanos co-presidents Inocente Nunez and Luis Sanchez-Harguindey answered questions from the crowd.

    When asked about the loosening of trade restrictions by the U.S., Sanchez-Harguindey said the steps are a move in the right direction. “We will be able to bring our culture, our product, closer to the U.S. customer. Our product is highly demanded and appreciated around the world … these are exactly the same expectations that we have for the U.S.,” he said through an interpreter. “These measures must be put into context, as there are conditions such as the number of cigars that can be imported in the U.S. The main difference, as compared to previous measures, is the limit of 100 units. This is as opposed to the previous measure of $100. The impact over the past 2 1/2 months [since the change] has not been significant.”

    The best-selling vitola (format) worldwide has been Robusto. The Cohiba Robusto is the leading seller, followed by Partagas and Romeo y Julieta. In descending order, the largest markets for Cuban cigars are Spain, France, China, Germany, Cuba and Switzerland. Together, these six countries account for 50 percent of Habanos sales. “Increased tourism [13 percent growth from 2015 to 2016,  totaling more than 4 million visitors a year] has appreciated the growth of sales in the Cuban market,” said Sanchez-Harguindey. Overall, Habanos claims to be experiencing a 5 percent yearly growth, while the industry overall grows at 0.5 percent. “A heads-up for 2017, we are aware of challenges, and we continue to remain consistent in our pursuit to launch new products,” said Sanchez-Harguindey. “We are consistent in our mission towards innovation and quality.”

     

    Handmade Habanos

    Habanos SA was founded in 1994 to commercialize all the brands of Habanos and tobacco leaf worldwide. As an arm of the Cuban state tobacco company, Cubatabaco, Habanos controls the promotion, distribution and export of Cuban cigars and cigarettes. The company operates in more than 150 countries around the world. The term “Habanos” has been used since the late 19th century to identify the “puro” Cuban cigar. After more than 200 years, Habanos are the only cigars that continue to be made totally by hand with long filler, according to Habanos.

    Visiting a Cuban cigar factory is a unique experience. The smell is unmistakably tobacco, with a sweet honey and crisp cedar scent. Real Fabrica de Tobaccos La Corona is one of the more modern factories in Cuba. Although rich with tradition, the factory has changed locations several times throughout its history. Formerly known as “La Casa de Hierro,” La Corona is also the home to the Romeo y Julieta brand.

    The cigar factory is a living entity, and its rolling room is its central nervous system. Here, the dedicated hands of expert “torcedores”—cigar rollers—are hard at work. It’s crowded, and everyone has something to do. Only security guards and tour groups are standing around. Visitor Mark Ryan, of U.S.-based Daughters & Ryan, said he was in awe of the speed and quality of the Cuban craftsmanship. “Wow,” he exclaimed. “They are really good.”

    Festivalgoers were also able to visit the historic Fabrica de Tabacos Torcido H. Upmann, one of the most renowned cigar factories in the world. This is where the first vitolas for H. Upmann were created, according to Habanos. This year, the factory began production of the first H. Upmann Gran Reserva Cosecha 2011, in its iconic Sir Winston vitola. It’s the first Gran Reserva presented by the H. Upmann brand since its founding over 170 years ago, according to Habanos.

    This factory is special. Herman Upmann was a former banker who was the first to ship cigars in cedar boxes, according to our tour guide. When you enter, the rollers are smacking their chavetas (a crescent blade specifically designed for use in making cigars) on their rolling tables as a loud welcoming gesture. There are 695 workers in the H. Upmann rolling room alone. They produce up to 30,000 cigars a day. Music plays loudly, and everyone seems to be having fun producing product. Several rollers are simultaneously smoking cigars.

    It’s old, the factory, and it has several floors that housed rollers, quality control, aging and packaging in different areas as you climb the black wrought-iron stairs. All the H. Upmann brand’s vitolas are produced at this factory, including the Linea Magnum with Magnum 46, Magnum 50 and the recently launched Magnum 54. Rollers here are also responsible for producing prestigious vitolas for the Montecristo brand, including the most premium line offered by Montecristo, the new Linea 1935.

    Trading places

    While the trade show accompanying the festival offers its own excitement with beautiful women and well-dressed men showcasing uniquely Cuban humidors, antiques and other cultural items, the real draw is the seminars. Visitors can experience the International Habanosommelier Contest (think wine sommelier for cigars), as well as attend a master class on rolling cigars. There are also numerous lectures, and pairings of exclusive rums and brandies with cigars.

    The rolling class is one of the most popular seminars. The class was led by master roller Arnaldo Ovalles, who had some help from rollers from Cohiba’s famed El Laguito factory who strolled the floor. Attendees were taught how to roll a Corona Gorda vitola, which is the third most popular Cuban vitola, behind only the Mareva and Robusto sizes, according to Ovalles. Each participant is given all of the ingredients they need to roll said cigar: a cutting board, a chaveta, glue and tobacco for the filler, binder, and wrapper. Visitor George Cassels-Smith, CEO of U.S.-based Tobacco Technologies Inc., rolled one of the better cigars. “It’s not bad,” he said of his slightly crooked smoke with a satisfied grin.

    There was also a session on the history of the Quai D’Orsay cigar, “The Quai D’Orsay Brand—Then and Now.” Leading the lecture were journalist Yves Belaubre; Antoine Bathie of Seita, the former French distributor of Cuban cigars; Jose Maria Lopez Inchaurbe, strategic marketing director of Habanos SA; and Carlos Ferran, international marketing supervisor of Habanos.

    In 1973, the Quai D’Orsay cigar was born out of the lack of a quality French-only cigar and the strong bond between the French and Cuban people. It was the first regional division of Habanos SA (then Cubatabaco). There are different stories as to what the Quai D’Orsay name refers to. One is that it refers simply to the famous Paris avenue of the same name; another suggests it refers to the French foreign ministry located on it. Both are true, according to Bathie, whose father was instrumental in the development of the Quai D’Orsay brand. “My father thought this would be a good name for a cigar to be presented at events like state dinners,” said Bathie.

    An interesting addition to this year’s lecture series was named “The Art of Combination (the wrapper, the binder and the filler),” which was all about how the three parts of a cigar meld together to form the final product. Industry experts explained how a problem with one part can affect the entire smoking experience. Everyone was given one of four different cigars, each of which had something intentionally wrong with it, whether a twisted bunch, a draw that was too loose, poor construction issues or too much of one type of tobacco. Each person was then asked to smoke their sample and report back on what they thought was wrong with the cigar. The experts then explained what was wrong with the individual cigars and how they should have been constructed.

    Cuban nights

    The Habano Festival includes several interesting evening gatherings. With the exception of Monday’s opening evening event, which was waylaid by weather, Cuba put on quite the show. Free cigars, rum and the island’s stimulating nightlife come alive for the privileged attendees who managed to secure invitations. The closing gala event is hottest ticket in town, however. It’s hard to imagine something as spectacular outside of Las Vegas.

    The El Laguito reception hall served as host to dinner on Wednesday night. It was dedicated to Quai D’Orsay. Guests experienced the brand’s three vitolas—Coronas Claro and the new No. 50 and No. 54—as well as a vitola from its historical portfolio, Quai D’Orsay Imperiales. Only 2,000 were made exclusively for this dinner. The event featured various musical performances, all choreographed by Cuba’s maestro Santiago Alfonso’s company.

    The gala dinner paid tribute to the Montecristo brand and was held Friday evening at the Pabexpo center in the Miramar neighborhood in Havana. As part of the festivities, Habanos gave out samples of, among other cigars, the new Montecristo Linea 1935 in three different vitolas: Legend, Dumas and Maltes. This year’s celebration included performances by a number of different artists, including Haila, David Torrens, Diana Fuentes and A Otro Tiempo, as well as the Ballet de Lizt Alfonso, which celebrated its 25th anniversary last year.

    Then there was violinist Ara Malikian and his ensemble. It was one of the most spectacular shows of the event. Malikian and his instrument danced across the stage with great enthusiasm and energetic force. Many of these artists left the stage and circled among guests. After dinner and the shows came to an end, Habanos handed out awards in three different categories: business, communication and production. Cuban grower Josefa Acosta Ramos took the top spot in the production category, while Edward Sahakian, a U.K.-based tobacconist, won in the business category. Gordon Mott, senior contributing editor for Cigar Aficionado, prevailed in the communication category. Chile’s Puro Tabaco, with its representative Felipe Rojas, was unanimously voted the winner of the 16th edition of the International Habanosommelier Contest. Judges said it was the closest competition yet. “It’s an honor like no other,” Rojas said.

    Finally, the gala dinner and overall festival closed in a major way—with the famed humidor auction. This year’s auction got heated early as two bidders fought fiercely for the Cohiba humidor, for which Canadian bidder Leander Da Silva raised his numbered paddle with the highest winning bid of the night, €380,000 ($406,000). A few humidors exceeded the €250,000 mark, and by the end of the auction, seven one-of-a-kind humidors sold for more than $1.3 million. The money will be donated to the Cuban public health system.

    As the event officially ended, we said our goodbyes to the festival’s talented media team, headed by Habanos’ director of marketing operations, Daymi Difurniao, which organized the event. We passed through the large Pabexpo doors one last time, walking back into the humid Cuban air. Hundreds of taxi drivers stood like paparazzi waiting to ferry exhausted attendees home. Luckily, we already had a driver waiting for us who wisely parked a few blocks away so we didn’t have to sit through the chaotic traffic in front of the convention center. The Habano Festival was an amazing experience. There is just something rare and special about Cuba. Much like its cigars, its people are vibrant, beautiful and genuine. Next year, the world’s finest cigar show should be even better.


    Latest releases from Habanos SA, Cuba’s cigar monopoly

    There were several new cigars announced during the 19th Habano Festival. The first Gran Reserva from the H. Upmann brand in the Sir Winston (47 x 178 mm) vitola (format), was one of the most promising releases. This is one of the brand’s most special cigars; it has additional aging of its leaves and is only in limited production.

    Also exciting was the launch of Linea 1935 under the Montecristo brand. Three new vitolas are incorporated into the brand’s regular portfolio; these will become the most premium Habanos offered by Montecristo. Two of the three vitolas are unprecedented in the Habanos portfolio: Maltes (53 x 153 mm) and Dumas (49 x 130 mm), while Leyenda (55 x 165 mm) takes the form of the special limited-edition Montecristo 80 Aniversario, launched in 2015 to commemorate the brand’s 80th anniversary.

    Typically a strictly French offering, the Quai D’Orsay brand is reinventing itself. It is doing so by launching a new design and presenting two new vitolas, with international distribution in the major markets of Habanos SA. The Quai D’Orsay No. 50 (50 x 110 mm) and Quai D’Orsay No. 54 (54 x 135 mm) vitolas come in both in 10- and 25-unit presentations. These will be added to the Coronas Claro (42 x 142 mm) vitola to create an attractive brand portfolio that will be available worldwide in 2017 through the Habanos international distribution network.

    Habanos also released the new Romeo y Julieta Petit Royales (47 x 95 mm), a totally new vitola that is incorporated into the brand’s regular portfolio. With a heavy ring gauge and short length, this is a Habano in line with the current trend in formats increasingly demanded by enthusiasts around the world, according to Habanos SA.

    There were also three limited editions announced during the festival: Cohiba Talisman (54 x 154 mm), Partagas Serie No. 1 (52 ring gauge x 138 mm) and Punch Regios de Punch (48 x 120 mm). – TSD