From what I read a few years ago, to use nicotine even somewhat effectively as an industrial agricultural insecticide to feed a nation and trade to keep that nation viable, it has to be used at a minimum 400mg/ml strength and it's not used in the US agriculture industry. It's just not effective enough to rely on if you have better options and that makes it quite expensive. Doable if it's all that's economically available to you and if it's effective on the pests you need to combat against, but not preferrable if you're serious about making sure hunger isn't the norm.
Only one of the
USA nic sellers I'm aware of sells above 100mg/ml. In fact they sell above strengths we're allowed to talk about here. But absolutely none of them are hiding the fact that they are selling for either vape or other human consumption purpose (if you have "vape" or vapor" in your name and/or you sell obvious vape supples, the intent is obvious...obviously). And since nicotine is a regulated "tobacco product", Im surprised that, at the very least, prices haven't gone up through the roof across all retailers.. Overall nic prices did go up since the 2020 (2021?) USPS smackdown, but a few retailers didn't raise the price that much (under 100% and some under 50%), although others increased their price by XXX%. However a good bit did either go out of business or stopped selling nic base.
I'm mostly shocked that retail nic is still available at 100+mg/ml at all TBH. But that won't last forever. It's tobacco. And RD has no tobacco in it unless you put it there, so it's rdiculous to claim it's a "tobacco product", but we can't use that argument with nic, especially since the marketing is obvious.
So yeah, I'm as shocked as you.