Pipe tobacco production has fallen exponentially over the past 30 years. Yes, there used to be many more pipe tobacco manufacturers, as well as tobacco growers and producers, but the shrinking sales volumes and increasing government regulation has made that economically unsustainable. Thus, the incredible consolidation that has left us with just a handful of pipe tobacco manufacturers worldwide.
I can't say that this has been good for the customer. While product quality has, in general, remained high, the diversity of offerings has shrunk precipitously. Processes and ingredients have been made uniform, eliminating the unique character that each blending house once had. Manufacturers that could justify small runs of unique products have been swallowed up by large corporations with much higher production run minimums. Growers that might harvest just small amounts of unique tobacco leaf for sale to smaller companies, now find themselves growinga more uniform leaf under contract to big buyers. And, of course, once production is concentrated in the hands of a few producers, competition is stifled and prices rise.