DEVELOPING NEW PRODUCTS FROM TOBACCO
DEVELOPING NEW PRODUCTS FROM TOBACCO
I understand the urge to keep planting our
traditional crops—especially those with deep roots in our history and culture.
But what if demand is falling? What if the farmers who grow these crops are
slipping deeper into poverty because the prices that they once relied on are no
longer there? And what if the product itself is increasingly viewed as harmful
to public health, with fewer acceptable uses each year? That, sadly, is the problem
facing the tobacco industry.
Is the market for
cigarettes and cigars really shrinking? Government should be able to measure
that with precision. A simple dashboard would do that: excise-tax–paid removals
from BIR (a proxy for sales), PSA data on area planted and farmgate prices,
NTA’s leaf procurement and farmer counts, DOH smoking prevalence, and DTI
export/import figures for leaf and finished products. If those lines are trending
down together, the signal is clear.
If government
confirms the problem, we need a two-track response. First, find new uses for
tobacco. Second, help farmers pivot to alternative crops that can thrive on the
same soils—cotton, coffee, and cacao among the prime candidates. The key is to
move with purpose, not panic, and to make sure no farmer—especially in the
Ilocos Region—is left high and dry.
On new uses:
tobacco dust is an overlooked winner. In Pangasinan, bangus growers have
long used it after every harvest—spreading 25 to 30 kilos per hectare on
sun-dried ponds. The dust pulls double duty: it knocks out snails and other
pests that compete with fingerlings, and it fertilizes the pond bottom so “lablab,”
that thin green mat of natural fish feed, can flourish. After 7–10 days, when
the pond bottom turns green, farmers refill to about a meter and stock
fingerlings that feed on lablab for a month or two before any commercial
feed is needed. When dust runs short, some use commercial fertilizers—but
chicken manure is generally avoided due to contamination risks flagged by BFAR.
Is tobacco dust
safe? Its active nicotine dissipates quickly under sun and water—breaking down
within minutes and transforming into harmless compounds like nicotinic acid
(vitamin B3). Used correctly, there’s no contamination of the fish. It even
works best in dry ponds under the midday sun, when the aroma releases and
predators die off fast.
What is tobacco
dust made of? Mostly leaf fragments—lamina, ribs, stems—plus naturally
occurring nicotine, minerals like nitrogen and potassium, and organic compounds
that help soil. It can be applied as powder, brewed as a “tea” for integrated
pest management, or, in some cases, used as fumigant. Unlike some manures, it
doesn’t introduce weed seeds or heavy metals.
Is there a
world market? There’s no formal commodity exchange for tobacco dust, but there
is a niche, growing demand in agriculture, aquaculture, and even industrial
filtration. Trade is localized and often bundled with processing contracts.
That said, let’s be honest: this market will not replace the cigarette business
in scale. Cigarettes remain a colossal global market; tobacco dust and other
non-smoking applications are tiny by comparison. But impact is not only about market
size. If tobacco dust lowers costs for fish and vegetable farmers, reduces
chemical inputs, and creates a circular economy for a byproduct we used to
waste, that’s real value.
So how do we
turn this into a livelihood strategy? Three steps. First, standards:
DA/NTA/BFAR should issue clear handling and application protocols (dosage, PPE,
timing), plus quality grades for dust. Second, supply chains: form farmer and
fisherfolk co-ops to aggregate dust, package it, and supply barangay-level
aquaculture kits. Third, public procurement: LGUs and BFAR can include
tobacco-dust kits in support to fishponds and community gardens.
Now to the
second track: alternatives on the same soils. Cotton is viable but
water-hungry; it needs drip irrigation, pest management, and guaranteed offtake
(uniforms, hospital linens, eco-textiles). Coffee and cacao offer steadier
demand, shade-grown potential, and local value-adding. A practical path is
rotation and intercropping: short-term cash (vegetables, peanuts, mung bean)
while coffee or cacao establish; soil remediation after tobacco; and
cooperative processing (ginning for cotton, fermentation/drying for cacao,
community roasting for coffee).
My suggestion:
launch a five-year “Tobacco Transition Compact” in Ilocos and nearby
provinces—funded by sin tax shares and development partners—covering (1) income
protection during transition, (2) training and inputs, (3) small processing
facilities, (4) market contracts with private buyers and government
procurement, and (5) a dedicated line for tobacco-dust enterprises.
We honor tradition best by securing the farmer’s
future. If the old market is shrinking, we must design a broader farm
economy—one that transforms byproducts into inputs, swaps monocrops for mixed
livelihoods, and replaces anxiety with agency. Tobacco gave us decades of
income. Now let it give us a platform for new products—and a bridge to better
crops.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres,
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com, 09088877282,
senseneres.blogspot.com
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