Author: Staff Writer

  • Website names tobacco’s supporters

    Two lung specialists have launched a website listing the names and jobs of people it says work for the tobacco industry lobby in the Netherlands, according to a DutchNews.nl story.

    The list includes health minister, Edith Schippers, described as the ‘minister of tobacco employers’, as well as several other prominent politicians.

    Schippers, an ex-smoker, relaxed the ban on smoking in small bars and cafés following a court ruling, and reduced funding for anti-smoking measures.

    She has since handed over responsibility for smoking policy to her deputy.

    The website is the initiative of a foundation set up to stop youngsters picking up the smoking habit. The foundation, Stichting Rookpreventie Jeugd, operates under the slogan: ‘smoking kills, government do something’.

    The two doctors argue that information about the dangers of smoking does not help as long as the tobacco lobby remains active behind the scenes.

    Christian Democrat senator, Hans Hillen, listed on the site as a former tobacco industry adviser, was quoted as saying he was neutral about smoking and accused the makers of the website of ‘hypocritical fanaticism’.

  • Imperial clears rubbish, improves hygiene in Gabon-factory neighborhood

    An initiative funded by Imperial Tobacco’s local business has seen the clearance of more than 120 tonnes of rubbish from a neighbourhood in the capital of Gabon.

    A lack of municipal waste collections together with fly-tipping had been creating a hygiene problem; so the company stepped in to help support the community near its factory in Libreville.

    It did this by asking the firm that removes commercial waste from the Imperial factory to widen its services to cover the local area, too.

    As a result more than 45 tonnes of rubbish was cleared in an initial two-day purge and, since last October, more than 25 tonnes have been removed each month.

    “This improvement in hygiene and general living conditions is an example of the support our company can bring to the community,” said Jacques Landrieau, general manager Gabon.

  • PMI to webcast conference presentation

    Philip Morris International is due to host a live audio webcast at www.pmi.com of its presentation to the Consumer Analyst Group of Europe (CAGE) conference in London, UK. The presentation will start about 10.15 hours local time on March 18.

    The webcast, which will be in listen-only mode, will provide audio of the presentation and Q&A session by Jacek Olczak, CFO.

    An archived copy of the webcast will be available at www.pmi.com until 17.00 hours Eastern Time (US) on April 16.

    Presentation slides and the script will also be available at the same address.

  • New SM board member proposed

    Wenche Rolfsen will be put forward by the nominating committee of Swedish Match for election as a new member of the company’s board. The election will take place during the annual general meeting on April 25.

    Rolfsen is said to have broad experience in the development, marketing and sales of health care and consumer products.

    She is currently the chairman of the boards of ApreaAB, a Swedish biotech company, and of Index Pharmaceuticals, a Swedish pharmaceutical company; vice chairman of Moberg Derma, a Swedish pharmaceutical company; and a board member of Stiftelsen Industrifonden, among other companies.

    Rolfsen holds a Master of Science in Pharmacy and a Ph.D in pharmacology (1980) from the Pharmaceutical Faculty of Uppsala University. For a number of years she held an adjunct professorship in Pharmacology at the same university.

  • E-Lites notches up another court victory in fight for soul of e-cigarettes

    The UK based electronic cigarette company, E-Lites, has overturned an attempt by a European government to have electronic cigarettes classified as medical devices.

    The Administrative Court in Estonia last week found in favour of Zandera Ltd, owners of the E-Lites brand, and against the Estonian State Agency of Medicines.

    This decision comes at a time when the EU is proposing to classify electronic cigarettes as medicinal products under the revised EU Tobacco Products Directive (TPD).

    It follows similar recent court decisions in Germany, the Netherlands and the US. All refused medicinal classification for electronic cigarettes.

    “We are delighted common sense has prevailed,” said Michael Ryan, chairman of Zandera, in welcoming the decision in Estonia.

    “E-Lites are not designed as a medicine; they’re designed as an alternative consumer product choice for smokers.

    “We welcome the Estonian Court’s decision and we hope it will persuade other governments and regulatory bodies to review any similar proposals.”

    The TPD, as drafted, would have the effect of removing from the market, pending medicinal authorization, virtually all electronic cigarettes, despite the fact they are proving a popular alternative for smokers and are increasingly widely recognised as being safer than cigarettes are.

    “We are confident e-cigs are an exciting breakthrough and potentially ‘transforming’ product and we want to work with governments and regulators across Europe to agree the appropriate regulatory framework,” said Ryan.

    “Public health experts are proclaiming the significant contribution to tobacco harm reduction e-cigs are already making and we desperately want that to continue.”

  • Hamshaw-Thomas joins E-Lites

    Charles Hamshaw-Thomas has been appointment director of legal and corporate affairs at E-Lites, the UK-based electronic cigarette company.

    Hamshaw-Thomas has substantial senior executive experience as general counsel and corporate affairs director for some of the UK’s largest plc’s. He has extensive experience and knowledge of the political and regulatory environment surrounding smoking and tobacco. And, as principal of CSR Solutions, is recognised as one of the UK’s leading environmental litter campaigners.

    “We are delighted to welcome Charles to our team,” said Adrian Everett, chief executive. “He is a highly experienced individual with a rich background in political, regulatory and legal affairs. We believe his appointment will further strengthen our team and reinforce E-Lites’ position as the UK’s leading e-cig brand.”

    Meanwhile, Hamshaw-Thomas said he had watched closely in recent years the emergence of the electronic cigarette. “I believe it’s an exciting breakthrough and potentially ‘transforming’ product, and am correspondingly delighted to have been asked to join the team and help them establish E-Lites as one of the world’s leading brands in what is a rapidly expanding industry.”

  • Estonian ministry wants menthol banned

    The Estonian Ministry of Social Affairs is in favor of banning the sale of menthol cigarettes and requiring that graphic health warnings are included on cigarette packages, according to a story in the Baltic Daily.

    The ministry last week declared its position in respect of the EU Commission’s proposed revisions to the Tobacco Products Directive.

    It has forwarded its views to the working group of tobacco policy experts, which is due to report on its findings by tomorrow.

    If accepted, the directive revisions would ban cigarettes with a characterizing flavor.

    Ivi Normet, the ministry’s deputy secretary general for health affairs, said the only flavored cigarettes sold in Estonia were menthol products, which were very popular among women and young people.

  • Finland ministry wants no brand identities

    Finland’s Ministry of Social Affairs and Health would like tobacco packs to have no brand information on them at all, according to an Esmerk Finnish News story quoting an unnamed newspaper report.

    Such a proposal goes further than do the proposed revisions to the EU’s Tobacco Products Directive put forward by the Commission in December, and further even than the standardized tobacco package regulations imposed in Australia.

    It is perhaps in line with a proposal put forward in Turkey some time ago whereby cigarette packs would have been identified at retail only by numbers that could be decoded by those with access to a list matching the numbers with the brand names.

  • Awaiting votes on coupled subsidies

    The European Public Health Alliance (EPHA) has called for the rejection of a proposal that would reintroduce subsidies coupled to tobacco production, according to a story in Europolitics.

    The EU Parliament is due to vote on the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) reform package this week.

    “Pumping taxpayers’ money into a harmful industry once more is a step backwards for Europe and does nothing to support efforts to move farmers from producing one of Europe’s greatest killers to a more sustainable crop,” said Monika Kosinska, secretary-general of the EPHA.

    At the end of January, the parliament’s Committee on Agriculture (AGRI) backed a proposal to remove any restrictions on products that could be supported by coupled subsidies when voting on their amendments to the Commission’s proposed direct payments regulation.

    Coupled tobacco subsidies were scrapped in 2010.

    Producers will now be hoping that the AGRI’s decision will be confirmed both by parliament and the Council of Ministers.

  • NewCo opens new Indian facility

      The new plant has a storage capacity of four million kg.

    NewCo and its Indian partner, S.B. Impex, last week officially inaugurated a leaf facility close to Guntur, Andhra Pradesh.

    ‘We are able to store up to four million kg and to pack hand strip and butted tobaccos of various Indian varieties,’ NewCo said in a press note.

    The plant is located on the main road from Guntur to Chennai, about 30 km from Guntur, though the office and mail address remains in downtown Guntur.

    It will afford the company better control of its tobacco purchases.