Author: Taco Tuinstra

  • Policy Masterstroke or Political Quagmire?

    Policy Masterstroke or Political Quagmire?

    Image: Zerbor

    Rules to reduce nicotine in cigarettes are back on the agenda.

    By Clive Bates

    On June 21, the United States Federal government announced its intention to develop a rule requiring deeply reduced nicotine levels in cigarettes on sale in the United States. This idea has been in circulation since first proposed in 1994 and was given a new lease of life in the FDA comprehensive plan in 2017. In late 2021, New Zealand adopted this policy and has committed to introducing legislation this year. The zombie policy is back, and it walks among us. Despite the warped logic of taking out the relatively benign nicotine and leaving the very harmful tar, despite the obvious practical problems of mounting a de facto cigarette prohibition at this scale, and despite the weird ethics of encouraging people to switch from one smoking product to another smoking product, this idea just will not die. How should we consider this proposal from a tobacco market transformation perspective?

    First, let us consider how this would work in practice. Regulators would introduce a rule requiring that cigarettes must have a very low nicotine level in the tobacco, say 0.4 mg per gram of tobacco compared to typically 16mg per gram—a 40-fold reduction. The level would be so low that nicotine could not play a meaningful role in the smoking experience, and “compensation” to obtain a satisfactory nicotine dose by puffing harder would not be possible. For unexplained reasons, regulators and researchers think that people would continue to buy and use these products, but smoke less and not become addicted to them. That forms the basis of the public health rationale for such a rule. But this is absurd.

    Second, the science is weak. Given that the main reason people smoke is to experience the effects of the stimulant nicotine, using low-nicotine cigarettes is among the least likely of all the possible responses to such a rule. After trying such products once, few smokers be willing to hand over hard-earned cash at the corner store for cigarettes with no noticeable nicotine. Yet nearly all the science to support rulemaking assumes that smokers will use these products and then finds out what happens if they do. But trials are not markets. In a trial, the subjects are volunteers and agree to participate. They are paid or incentivised to stick with the trial protocol and are usually provided with free cigarettes. This is nothing like real life.

    Third, what matters in real life is how users and suppliers respond to the disruption. A low-nicotine rule would eliminate the lawful supply of nicotine cigarettes. But it does not make them disappear from the market. It changes who supplies them, how, and at what price, creating incentives to develop a black market. The established producers would not remain passive either. They will find other lawful ways to sell nicotine-bearing smokes, for example, by selling cigars or hand-rolling tobacco or promoting workarounds such as personal cigarette-making machines. Consumers who use nicotine cigarettes will not automatically become abstinent or lose their interest in nicotine just because the FDA introduces a rule. Maybe they switch to black market cigarettes, cigars, or vaping. Nothing remains constant. A new rule disrupts the market, but it does not mean smokers will automatically do what regulators hope they will. The question is, what would they do, and can this be influenced?

    Fourth, regulators must shape the behavioural and market response to the rule. Merely implementing a low nicotine rule does not determine its public health impact. The pattern of behavioural responses to the rule will determine the overall effect. “Good pathways” like switching from smoking to vaping will compete with “bad pathways” like switching to black market products. Confidence in good behavioural responses to a rule should be a precondition for its introduction. Suppose we hope a reduced nicotine rule would prompt a migration of smokers to smoke-free alternatives. Three conditions would need to be met to incentivise migration from smoking to vaping. (1) the smoke-free products must be affordable, attracting zero or minimal tax. (2) the products would need to appeal to smokers by offering a diverse selection of flavours, good nicotine delivery, and a range of devices to suit all needs. (3) consumers must be aware of the benefits of switching, notably the dramatically reduced health risk compared to smoking. Sadly, there is no sign that the U.S. tobacco control community is working towards these meeting these preconditions, though there is a little more policy coherence in New Zealand.

    Fifth, there is a paradox at the heart of this proposal. A reduced nicotine rule needs good pathways to the low-risk options discussed above to make it viable. But when those preconditions are met, a low nicotine rule loses most of its purpose. Meeting the preconditions for a rule is a more useful policy than the rule itself. When those conditions are met, everyone who wants to quit smoking by switching can make an informed choice and just do it. What is the case for coercing the smoking holdouts? Surely, the state’s role should be to get in their corner with help and encouragement, not a big regulatory stick. And what if some people are fully aware of the risks, fully understand their options to switch to high-quality, low-risk alternatives, but still don’t want to switch? Should they be made to? And anyway, would anyone in public health want smokers to switch to a low-nicotine cigarette when they could be encouraged to vape? Imagine if a manufacturer brought out a vaping or heated tobacco product with the same nicotine delivery and toxicity profile as a low-nicotine cigarette? No one would take such a product seriously, let alone propose it as a public health intervention.

    Sixth, but what about youth? One of the big ideas that underpin this proposal is that non-addictive cigarettes would stop teenagers from falling into the trap of addiction and lifelong smoking and harm. This is now a much weaker argument than in 1994 when the reduced nicotine cigarette idea was conceived. In 1994, 12th grade past-30-day smoking prevalence was 31 percent. In 2021, it was down to 4 percent, according to the University of Michigan Monitoring the Future survey. The current trend in youth smoking is sharply downwards from a low base. Teenage vaping is likely doing the job that reduced nicotine cigarettes were once supposed to do – eliminate teen smoking. The other argument is that no evidence exists that this de facto cigarette prohibition would work. Consider the case of youth marijuana use. The Monitoring the Future survey shows that 12th grade past-30-day prevalence has been steady at an average of around 21 percent since 1994. But throughout most of this period, marijuana has been completely prohibited. The point is that banning something does not make it disappear or mean that teenagers cannot access it. It is more likely to mean they participate in illicit supply.

    Seventh, the politics will be very fraught. Though the legal base for such a rule would be Section 907 of the Tobacco Control Act, it would be a mistake to believe this could be done as a narrow technocratic rule-making exercise. Such a measure would impact a wide range of stakeholders far beyond the FDA’s routine contacts. U.S. cigarette sales are about $80 billion annually, and every part of that supply chain, from farmers to convenience store retailers, would be affected. There would be a substantial hit on the cigarette tax and master settlement receipts to State budgets. Law enforcement would be drawn in, with the potential for some of the adverse impacts we have seen in the War on Drugs. Then there is the question of identity politics. Surely, tobacco control activists have noticed that even sensible public health responses to the Covid-19 pandemic became weaponised into polarising identity politics. How would the Federal government intervening in the personal behaviour of 34 million American smokers play out in the febrile and divisive political climate that has developed in the U.S. since 2016? Which political leader will take a hard look at this measure and conclude, “yes, that is just what I need to win the next election”?

    In my view, measures like a low-nicotine rule are fantasy “policy masterstrokes”, in which a massive problem is solved with the swish of the regulator’s pen. I doubt this measure will ever work in real life. It will be mired in a practical, legal and political quagmire until it is no longer relevant. In the meantime, it is a distraction from the more useful, feasible and respectful regulatory business of setting up risk-proportionate regulation, fair taxation, and honest risk communication about smoke-free nicotine products. Migration of the market for consumer nicotine from smoking to smoke-free is the practical and viable way to make cigarettes obsolete and end the epidemic of smoking-related disease. A policy that relies on the consent of users rather than prohibition and coercion is far more likely to succeed.

  • Biden Administration Presses Ahead With Low-Nicotine Rule

    Biden Administration Presses Ahead With Low-Nicotine Rule

    Photo: Jaroslaw Grudzinski

    The U.S. government is moving ahead with a plan to mandate significant reductions of nicotine levels in cigarettes, reports The Wall Street Journal. Proponents believe the measure, which was unveiled this week as part of the government’s regulatory agenda, will prompt millions of Americans to quit smoking and prevent countless of others from taking up the habit. The administration decided to embrace the reduced-nicotine policy as part of President Biden’s Cancer Moonshot initiative, which aims to reduce the cancer death rate by at least 50 percent over the next 25 years.

    Implementation, however, is likely still years away. The FDA plans to publish a proposed rule in May 2023, after which it would invite public comments before publishing a final rule. Tobacco companies could then sue, which could further delay the policy’s implementation.

    The policy would apply to all cigarettes sold in the U.S. Imports of cigarettes with “normal” nicotine levels would be barred but multinational tobacco companies could continue to sell full-nicotine cigarettes in other countries. New Zealand’s Ministry of Health also has proposed a reduction of nicotine in cigarettes to very low levels as part of a broader plan to curb smoking.

    Health advocates have long pushed for lower nicotine levels, arguing that it would prevent future generations from becoming addicted to cigarettes, and prompt current smokers to quit. In 2009, the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act authorized the Food and Drug Administration to mandate such a change—with the stipulation that the policy be based on scientific evidence.

    Research funded by the FDA and National Institutes of Health has shown that when nicotine was nearly eliminated in cigarettes, smokers were more likely to quit or seek their nicotine fix from less harmful alternatives such as e-cigarettes or gum compared with smokers who continued using cigarettes with normal nicotine levels.

    According to estimates published in the New England Journal of Medicine, mandating a reduction of nicotine levels in cigarettes to very low levels would prompt an additional 5 million adult smokers to quit within a year of implementation.

    According to an FDA study published in 2018, such a rule would prompt an additional 13 million adult smokers to quit within five years of implementation.

    “Nicotine is powerfully addictive,” said FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf  in a statement. “Making cigarettes and other combusted tobacco products minimally addictive or non-addictive would help save lives. The U.S. Surgeon General has reported that 87 percent of adult smokers start smoking before age 18, and about two-thirds of adult daily smokers began smoking daily by 18 years of age. Lowering nicotine levels to minimally addictive or non-addictive levels would decrease the likelihood that future generations of young people become addicted to cigarettes and help more currently addicted smokers to quit.”

    Lowering nicotine levels to minimally addictive or non-addictive levels would decrease the likelihood that future generations of young people become addicted to cigarettes and help more currently addicted smokers to quit.

    Not everybody is convinced of the wisdom of a low-nicotine policy. Critics, such as Counterfactual Director Clive Bates, have cautioned that a reduced-nicotine mandate is unlikely to achieve its objectives. Some have suggested that the measure could lead people to smoke more, rather than less, because smokers would need a larger number of cigarettes to satisfy their nicotine cravings. This, in turn, would cause them to inhale more of the cancer-causing substances generated by combustion. Critics have also warned that requiring low-nicotine cigarettes would boost the illicit tobacco market.

    Cigarette companies also say it would take years for them to develop a very low-nicotine cigarette and that it wouldn’t be feasible to manufacture at scale. In the past, tobacco companies have made low-nicotine cigarettes by stripping nicotine from the tobacco leaf. Some technologies rely on chemicals while others use microwaves to extract nicotine.

    22nd Century Group, a biotechnology company, uses genetic engineering to grow tobacco with about 95 percent less nicotine than a typical tobacco plant for a cigarette brand called VLN. In December 2021, the FDA authorized the marketing of 22nd Century Group’s VLN King and VLN Menthol King cigarettes as modified risk tobacco products.

    In a press release, the president of 22nd Century Group’s tobacco programs, John Miller, said the company was delighted by the Biden administration’s decision to move forward with the reduced nicotine mandate. “The FDA requiring tobacco companies to reduce the nicotine content in all cigarettes sold in the United States has long been seen as the most powerful tool in the fight to reduce smoking and its grave health effects on citizens,” he said.

    22nd Century has repeatedly said it is willing to partner with other cigarette companies to provide tobacco seeds.

    Tobacco Reporter profiled 22nd Century Group in its June 2022 issue (See “In the Catbird seat“).

  • CCC Mulls Alternatives to Menthol Ban

    CCC Mulls Alternatives to Menthol Ban

    The Consumer Choice Center, a consumer advocacy group based in Washington D.C., hosted a “Menthol Melee,” proposing alternatives to the Food and Drug Administration’s pending bans on flavored cigars and menthol cigarettes.

    The event featured Gwenn Carr, the mother of Eric Garner, who died at the hands of police over untaxed cigarettes, as well as nearly a dozen current and former law enforcement officers who believe the proposed policy will erode community trust in places where officers patrol the streets.

    “We are hosting the Menthol Melee to hear from various community activists, law enforcement officers, and research experts who understand far too well how ill-fated a ban on these flavored tobacco products would be,” said Yaël Ossowski, deputy director at the Consumer Choice Center.

    “While a ban is well-intended, to stop a generation of people from smoking, it will almost certainly have a disproportionate impact on minority communities due to increased police enforcement and will take away police officers’ time from pursuing actual crimes. It will also create a new illicit market that will give incentives to criminals to traffic on our streets, making communities less safe than before,” said Ossowski.

    “Added to this, the FDA has done nothing to offer real alternatives that could help stop smoking today, including vaping devices, nicotine pouches, gums, lozenges, and more,” said Ossowski.

    “If the FDA is serious about reducing smoking in our country, then the answer must be on harm reduction in all aspects, rather than ratcheting up bans and restrictions that will cause more harm,” concluded Ossowski.

    A full list of all the speakers, as well as the full video, is available on consumerchoicecenter.org.

  • Quebec to Help Medicago Cut PMI Ties

    Quebec to Help Medicago Cut PMI Ties

    Photo: Leigh Prather

    The government of Quebec wants to help Medicago replace its shareholder Philip Morris International  with another investor so that the biotech firm can distribute its Covifenz Covid-19 vaccine internationally, reports CTV News.

    In February, Health Canada approved Covifenz, a tobacco plant-based coronavirus vaccination developed by Medicago and GlaxoSmithKline, for adults aged 18 to 64. In December 2021, the company said its two-dose vaccine was 71 percent effective in preventing Covid-19 infections, according to a large study that included several variants.

    However, in May, the World Health Organization rejected Covifenz, citing Medicago’s firm’s links to PMI, which owns 21 percent of Medicago shares. Article 5.3 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control obliges parties to ensure that their policies are protected “from commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry.”

    The Canadian government has signed a contract to purchase up to 76 million doses of Covifenz. Canada had planned to donate any excess vaccines to low-income countries through the Covax vaccine-sharing alliance. Since the WHO has denied Medicago’s request, Canada will not be able to donate doses of Covifenz.

    Quebec Economy Minister Pierre Fitzgibbon has been talking with Medicago’s other shareholder, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma, about the possibility of buying out PMI. Mitsubishi has asked the Quebec government for support so that Medicago’s vaccines “can receive a favorable reception from the WHO and be marketed on a large scale,” according to a recent entry in the Quebec Registry of Lobbyists.

    Canadian health groups applauded the efforts to replace PMI as a major shareholder.

    “Philip Morris’s involvement in Medicago is the main obstacle to widespread international distribution of the plant-based Covid-19 vaccine,” said Flory Doucas of the Quebec Coalition for Tobacco Control in a statement. “Medicago has previously signaled that alternative investors would help facilitate this outcome. Quebec’s intentions to buy out Philip Morris’s shares from Medicago is the logical path to the eventual approval for this vaccine by the World Health Organization.”

  • Kaival Brands Reports Quarterly Results

    Kaival Brands Reports Quarterly Results

    Photo: Song about Summer

    Kaival Brands’ revenues decreased by approximately $15.7 million in the second quarter of fiscal year 2022, compared to the same period of fiscal year 2021. Compared with the first quarter of 2022, however, revenues rose 11 percent.

    Gross profit in the second quarter of fiscal year 2022 was approximately $387,700, or approximately 12.7 percent of revenues, net, compared to approximately $6.3 million gross profit, or approximately 34.6 percent of revenues, net, for the second quarter of fiscal year 2021.

    In February 2022, Bidi Vapor was granted a judicial stay on the marketing denial order (MDO) previously issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration prohibiting the marketing and sale of nontobacco flavored Bidi Sticks, which had significantly impacted Kaival Brands’ revenues in previous quarters.

    As a result of the grant of the judicial stay of the MDO, the company’s revenues increased in the second quarter of fiscal 2022, as compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2022. Kaival Brands expect this trend to continue as renewed distribution ramps up and sales of nontobacco flavored Bidi Sticks increase, subject to the court ruling in Bidi Vapor’s favor in the pending merits-based case, and subject to the FDA’s enforcement discretion.

    “Our results demonstrate strong execution and resiliency in our business, as revenues in the second quarter of fiscal year 2022 rose 11 percent as compared to revenues in the first quarter of fiscal year 2022,” said Kaival Brands founder and CEO Niraj Patel in a statement.

    “The recently announced international licensing agreement with Philip Morris Products, a wholly owned affiliate of Philip Morris International, is a major milestone in the company’s efforts to expand the global sales and distribution of the Bidi Stick. From a balance sheet perspective, the international licensing agreement has the potential to generate substantial returns on capital for the company, given the low cash investment needed to reach a significant number of potential new consumers.”

  • EU to Review Feedback on Tobacco Framework

    EU to Review Feedback on Tobacco Framework

    Photo: mbruxelle

    The European Commission has collected feedback from almost 25,000 organizations, experts and citizens about its legislative framework for tobacco control. Its initial call for evidence feedback period ended June 17.

    The Commission will use the feedback to evaluate to what extent the legislative framework has fulfilled its goals and whether it is able to support a “tobacco-free generation” by 2040, as announced in Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan.

    Participants included organization such as the Independent European Vaping Alliance (IEVA), which identified several opportunities for improvement.

    “The European e-cigarette market is one of the most regulated and safest worldwide. IEVA supports the tobacco product directive which has allowed for safe products to be made available to EU consumers. These rules have prevented irresponsible business—as we unfortunately have witnessed in the U.S., where the vaping market was not regulated—and whose behaviors we most vehemently condemn,” the IEVA wrote in a statement.

    “We would like to use this submission to present areas that merit further consideration through the process of evaluating the Tobacco Products Directive which we believe have not been addressed through the process thus far. We will focus on three core areas which we believe need to be further explored in any discussion about a legislative review: the impact on smokers, the impact on SMEs [small and medium-sized enterprises] and employment, and the impact on illicit trade.”

    The IEVA’s full contribution can be viewed here.

    The European Commission will hold a public consultation in the fourth quarter of 2022 and anticipates adoption in the second quarter of 2023.

  • Taat Appoints Michael Saxon as CEO

    Taat Appoints Michael Saxon as CEO

    Michael Saxon (Photo: Taat Global Alternatives)

    Taat Global Alternatives has appointed tobacco industry veteran Michael Saxon as CEO and member of its board of directors. Former CEO Setti Coscarella will remain available to the company as an advisor. Saxon has been on the Taat Advisory Board since late 2020.

    Saxon is an accomplished consumer products executive with more than 25 years of experience growing Fortune 100 businesses in the United States, Europe and Asia. He has influenced government policy and led business units while operating in different regulatory systems.

    Saxon served in various positions for over 20 years with Altria Group and Philip Morris International. Most recently, he helped create Trolley Ventures, a Richmond, Virginia, USA, venture capital firm investing in early-stage start-ups.

    “I’m excited to be joining the Taat team,” said Saxon in a statement. “This is an exhilarating time in our industry, and Taat is positioned to be a disruptor. With about 18 months of actual market and consumer feedback, I believe Taat is in an ideal position to accelerate its commercialization efforts.

    “This will include focusing our efforts on the large and profitable USA market, while our product development team leverages their capabilities to develop other Beyond Tobacco products that can further disrupt the USA and other international markets. There is a tremendous market opportunity for the company, and I am eager to launch new initiatives to accelerate adult consumer adoption of Taat.”

    “It has been my pleasure to lead Taat through our initial years and through the pandemic. At this point, I am satisfied the company is in an excellent position to hand direction over to Mr. Saxon, and I am pleased to be continuing my participation as an Advisor,” said Coscarella.

  • Canada Proposes New Vapor Disclosure Requirements

    Canada Proposes New Vapor Disclosure Requirements

    Photo: DD Images

    The Canadian government wants vapor product manufacturers to disclose information about their sales  and the ingredients used in their products.

    On June 17, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health Carolyn Bennett announced the launch of a 45-day public consultation period on the proposed rules.

    “Canada’s vaping market is evolving rapidly,” Health Canada wrote in a press release. “A large number of vaping substances are available across the country and new formulations are frequently introduced with new flavors. Health Canada is restricted in its capacity to properly track market trends due to limited access to information on vaping products sales and composition.”

    According to Health Canada, the proposed regulations are the first step of a gradual approach to introducing vaping product reporting requirements. Health Canada is considering additional reporting requirements for implementation in the future similar to those already in place for tobacco products. This could include reporting on information related to research and development as well as promotional activities. It could also include disclosing some information to the public which would increase industry transparency.

    “As the vaping market continues to evolve rapidly and entice Canadians, including young people, to use vaping products, we are taking action to better protect everyone in Canada by more fully understanding the impact of these products on their health,” said Bennett. “The proposed regulations will help us educate Canadians about the health harms while furthering research aimed at reducing the amount of people impacted by harms related to tobacco and vaping product use across the country.” 

    The proposed regulations have been published in the Canada Gazette. Stakeholders can submit comments to mailto:mpregs@hc-sc.gc.ca until Aug. 2.

  • Essentra Tapes Expands Global Sales Team

    Essentra Tapes Expands Global Sales Team

    Photo: alphaspirit

    Essentra Tapes is expanding its global sales team.

    The appointments come as the post-pandemic packaging sector is buoyant, seeing heightened demand for enhanced direct-to-consumer packaging to fulfill the needs of increasingly e-commerce-focused brands, according to a company press release.

    “As the packaging sector is seeing increasing demand, we are seeing an explosion of interest in our innovative tape solutions,” said Christopher Morgan, global sales director at Essentra Tapes. “With our industry being so competitive at the moment, particularly in terms of direct-to-consumer e-commerce packaging solutions, converters and brands know that the opening experience is a key driver of repeat business.

     “We are delighted to welcome so many new members to the Essentra team to help us provide excellent service to all our customers, new and old. We are seeing particular spikes in demand across the APAC [Asia Pacific] region for all of our tape solutions—not just easy-open tapes but reclosing and authentication tapes too. But generally, our global operations are all scaling up, which is good news for all our customers worldwide.”

     The appointments include new regional sales managers in the U.S., Brazil and APAC region along with other hires on the EU team. One of the key aims of the company is to drive continued growth in its tape applicator business. Morgan added, “Web and sheetfeed applicators are key to our growth and to the growth of our converter customers. It’s an exciting time for our business, as the applicator business is already growing rapidly, and we expect our talented new sales managers to take that growth to the next level.”

  • Carbon Neutrality for American Snuff

    Carbon Neutrality for American Snuff

    Photo: Sergey Shimanovich

    Two American Snuff locations have boosted their environmental credentials, according to Reynolds American Inc.

    American Snuff Co. Memphis has achieved carbon neutrality for its operations, scope 1 and 2, in accordance with PAS 2060 for the period between Dec. 1, 2020, to Nov. 30, 2021.

    American Snuff Co. Taylor Brothers has also achieved carbon neutrality for its operations, scope 1 and 2, in accordance with PAS 2060 for the period between Dec. 1, 2020, to Nov. 30, 2021.