|
Los Angeles – Imports of all kinds of
cigars continued to flow into the United States
into the fourth quarter of 2007 at a pace that
may be the second-best on record. The report
on imports through October of 2007 provided by
the Cigar Association of America showed
that year-over-year, imports increased by 9.52
percent to 33.2 million premium cigars.
For the year, imports reached 268.9 million
handmade cigars through the first 10 months of
the 2007. That’s an increase of 7.71 percent
for the year and if the pattern holds through
the December report, the total for the year will
reach 335.0 million, the second-highest total
on record. That would be more than the 334.6
million in 1998, the final year of the Cigar
Boom and a total that many cigar industry executives
thought it would be many more years before such
a figure was even approached. The all-time record
of 417.8 million from 1997 is not in danger,
of course.
Of course, premium cigars are only one part
of the much larger cigar trade. And U.S. cigar
imports of all kinds have gone wild in 2007.
In addition to the 268.9 million handmade cigars
imported, 468.6 million machine-made cigars have
come into the U.S. for a total "large-cigar" count
of 737.5 million through ten months. That’s
up an astonishing 34.4 percent.
Then there are little cigars. After ten months,
little cigar imports are 277.8 million, ahead
by 60.4 percent over 2007! A little more than
38 percent of these come from India, with another
20.6 percent from Brazil.
Put all the figures together and the total number
of cigars imported through October of 2007 is
1.015 billion cigars. That’s a lot of cigars
and a stunning 23.3 percent ahead of the comparable
figures for 2006. Quite a testament to the U.S.
cigar market, easily the world’s largest.
>> In a delicious twist, the head of the
Portuguese governmental agency assigned to enforce
the new public smoking ban was seen lighting
up a cigar at a New Year’s party!
Antonio Nunes is the head of
Portugal’s food standards agency, which
has the responsibility to enforce the new laws
banning smoking in public places. He was photographed
by the Diario de Noticias newspaper
smoking a cigar in a casino outside of Lisbon.
Nunes said he was not aware that the new law
covers casinos, but the Ministry of Health confirmed
it. That makes Nunes one of the first to break
the new law that his agency is supposed to enforce!
>> Smokers have been on a long legislative
losing streak not just in the United States,
but all around the world. But now Zvi
Hendel is fighting back.
Hendel is a member of the Knesset, the Israeli
Parliament, and in addition to being a long-time
smoker, is doing something about it. In opposition
to an anti-smoking bill passed in 2007 through
the efforts of virulently anti-smoking Knesset
member Gilad Erdan, Hendel introduced
a bill to require local authorities to approve
smoking permits for 20 percent of bars, cafes
and restaurants in each jurisidiction!
About 24 percent of Israeli adults smoke at
present and Hendel told the Jerusalem Post: "Why
should the entire population of smokers in Israel
be discriminated against? Non-smokers should
have their places, and smokers can have theirs."
>> Short fillers: The new Winston
Churchill cigar brand, created and
made in four sizes in the Davidoff factory
in the Dominican Republic, was actually authorized
by a descendant of the famed British Prime
Minister of the World War II era. It turns
out that Winston S. Churchill,
grandson of Sir Winston Spencer Leonard
Churchill (1874-1965), was the one
behind the new blend. The Winston Churchill
line had been slated exclusively for the Davidoff
shops across North America, but a small number
of other stores have received shipments. The
official launch of the brand will come in February.
Want more? Join us for daily
coverage of cigars, accessories, people and issues
at www.CigarCyclopedia.com.
Heard in the Humidor is a
publication of Perelman, Pioneer & Company of
Los Angeles, California, USA. Copyright 2007;
All rights reserved.
|