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U.S. Flue-Cured Tobacco Growers, Person County, North Carolina. Flue-cured tobacco is a type of cigarette tobacco. Along with burley tobacco, it accounts for more than 90% of US tobacco production. Flue-cured farming is centered in North Carolina. Production was limited by national marketing quotas and acreage allotments. The crop was eligible ...
The process will generally take about a week. This method produces tobacco that is high in sugar and has medium to high levels of nicotine. The Smith Tobacco Barn is an example of a traditional, flue-cured tobacco barn. [6] Flue-cured tobacco requires an estimated one tree per 300 cigarettes. [7]
Fred Gaines Bond Jr. (January 1, 1929 – June 1, 1997) was an American politician and tobacco industry representative, associated with the Flue Cured Tobacco Stabilization Corporation (now the U.S. Tobacco Cooperative). He was a three-term mayor of Cary, North Carolina. When he died, Bond was hailed as a “founding father" of Cary. [1]
A no net cost assessment was collected on all leaf tobacco sold to build a reserve fund that reimbursed the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) for any losses of loan principal and interest. Adoption of the tobacco quota buyout in P.L. 108-357, Title VI, also ended the price support program for the crop in 2005 and subsequent years.
Y1 has a higher nicotine content than conventional flue-cured tobacco (6.5% versus 3.2—3.5%), [16] but a comparable amount of tar, and does not affect taste or aroma. [17] British American Tobacco (BAT) began to discuss the trialling of Y1 tobacco in 1991, [18] despite it not being approved for use in the United States. [13]
Title II was designated the Tobacco Adjustment Act of 1983. Title II provided for reduced levels of price support for tobacco, the prohibition of lease and transfer of flue-cured quota, the mandatory sale of allotments and quotas by nonfarming entities, the required inspection of imported tobacco, and various other modifications to the tobacco ...
This method produces cigarette tobacco that is high in sugar and has medium to high levels of nicotine. It is the fastest method of curing, requiring about a week. Virginia tobacco that has been flue cured is also called bright tobacco, because flue curing turns its leaves gold, orange, or yellow. [citation needed]
Flue-cured tobacco (a.k.a. "Virginia" tobacco [6]), especially when using an open flame, contains most of the NNK in American blended tobaccos [7] although Marlboro's "virginia blend" had the lowest levels of NNK per nicotine out of many tested with the exception of Natural American Spirit. [8]