LOL.....glycol has always been added to the tobacco and is not added in any different amounts now as it was years go. However, SG used to be literally soaked in water and so much went mouldy. To stop this problem, we no longer add as much water to SG blends.By soaked in Propylenglycol I mean that, as you know and due to the great problem that occurred with your tobaccos between 2018 and 2019, which arrived completely moldy (I attach photos) or completely dry, you have decided to impregnate your tobacco in this type of alcohol (Propylenglycol) in indecent amounts, so much so that cans without vacuum packaging maintain their moisture, so much so that tobacco when it is "dry" seems to remain moist.
During those years; 2018, 2019, 2020... coincidentally, your cans changed, according to close sources your European can supplier retired and you decided to cut costs by ordering the cans from China, a fatal mistake instead of looking for a local or European can supplier. As you already know, the problem with these Chinese cans is that they are made of a much softer metal and of poorer quality and lose their vacuum over time... The packaging machine does not work well, you said... You know, from Spain, there were hundreds of complaints and cans returned... dozens of 250g packages returned to the tobacconists...
You even went so far as to put glue inside the cans (photo attached) so that they would not lose the vacuum packaging... but without success... the cans lost it.
Seeing that it was inevitable, your speech changed, saying that now Samuel Gawith did not manufacture his tobacco prepared for aging, when we all knew that Samuel Gawith had always had tins in perfect condition that endured decades of aging in the cellar.
We, who love tobacco and this noble art above all else, feel sorry and are truly sad to see how a company with so many years of prestige behind it doubles its prices and lowers its quality so much.
It is totally logical that the prices go up... but that the quality be maintained, not that the quality go down. Most veteran pipe smokers in Spain already advocate manufacturers
like Kohlhase & Kopp, more constant and neat, with perfect cans and tobaccos without problems, at lower prices.
We had a massive problem with our former distributor in Spain in these years you talk about. He re-packaged the tobacco, it was clearly not kept in appropriate warehouse conditions and then much went mouldy. We no longer work with this guy or his company and indeed he owes us an awful lot of money. This is why 250g packages were returned. The problem lay with the distributor. And as you state it was 250g packages. NOT 50g tins.
Not sure who your close sources are, but let me give you an even closer source - ME! I have commented numerous times on the tin situation here and on many other forums and we even put out a press release about it. So its not some secret. The tin manufacturer we used many years ago was bought out and stopped producing the tins we needed. Nothing to do with cutting costs. We spent a year trying to find a new tin supplier. We had to get some temporary tins in the meantime which did not seal as well as had hoped and we were led to believe and so these had the cardboard inserts put in them to give them strength. Your information (i.e. rumours) are completely wrong. We looked for tin manufacturers all over, in Europe and beyond. There are no local tin manufacturers! We hoped to work with a European supplier but it was not possible as they would have had to invest in whole new machinery just to make our tins.
Then we spent a lot of time on R&D with the current tin manufacturer, changed the design and now have a good tin. It seals very well, even without a vacuum. Indeed the seal without a vacuum is much stronger than the old tin. However, we still put all the tins through the vacuum sealer.
My stance (speech) has never changed. We have never made tobacco for ageing. We make tobacco to be smoked. IF you choose to age, that is your decision and therefore you need to decide how to do that and in what container and conditions. Gawith's have been producing tobacco for over 200 years. Ageing tobacco is therefore a relatively new idea, mostly coming from America.
Of course tobacco manufactured within the EU and sold to other EU countries will be cheaper, there is not the same transport issues, taxes, tariffs, track and trace etc. We have not lowered quality. Except for less water being added now, the way the tobacco is made is exactly the same. Yes the tins are different. We are a tobacco manufacturer, not a tin manufacturer so we have to use what we can be supplied with. But the tins we have now are fine for the purpose they are designed for - packaging the tobacco so it gets to the end consumer in good condition and ready to be smoked.
We are a premium traditional manufacturer and that comes at a price.
So for all your moaning about tins and quality, you still the have SG tobaccos in your top 15, indeed as you say the top 5, so I guess quality cannot be that bad hey????????
I suggest you stop listening to rumour, making up stories and timelines to suit your narrative and if you enjoy the tobacco buy it and smoke it, if you don't, buy something else.