Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

***The views expressed in the articles published on this website DO NOT necessarily express the views of the Commercial Farmers' Union.***

118,5m kgs flue cured tobacco goes under the hammer

118,5m kgs flue cured tobacco goes under the hammer

http://www.theindependent.co.zw/

Thursday, 30 June 2011 19:37

A TOTAL of 118,5 million kgs of flue cured tobacco valued at US$323,4 
million have  so far been sold since the auction floors opened in February 
this year.
The sales are up 27,14%, from the 93,1 million kgs valued at US$276,5 
million sold during the same period last year.
According to figures from the Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB), 
of the 118,5 million kgs sold,  Tobacco Sales Floor handled 30,7 million kgs 
worth US$76,6 million.
Boka Tobacco Floors sold 14,1 million kgs valued at US$31,7 million, while 
Millennium Tobacco Floors handled 8,9 million kgs valued at US$21,5 million.
Contract farmers accounted for 64,5 million kgs valued at US$193,4 million 
during the period.
The golden leaf’s average price has been US$2,73, from US$2,97 recorded 
during the same period last year, an 8% decline.
A total of 1,5 million bales were laid, a 35,3% increase from last year’s 
1,1 million.
TIMB said Zimbabwe’s tobacco output may rise 38% to 170 million kgs this 
season, as more farmers planted the crop as the nation’s “economic 
environment” improved.
“Small-scale tobacco farmers currently account for more than half of 
Zimbabwe’s output. As production rises, farmers should now focus on 
improving quality,” said TIMB.
Zimbabwe earned US$347,8 million from tobacco sales last year, according to 
TIMB.  China was the main buyer, replacing Western companies that were 
traditionally the biggest buyers, it said.
Zimbabwe is the world’s sixth-largest exporter of the flue- cured Virginia 
tobacco.
It lags behind Brazil, India, the United States, Argentina and Tanzania, 
according to the website of Universal Corp., the world’s biggest 
tobacco-leaf merchant. — Staff Writer.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp

New Posts: