Author: Taco Tuinstra

  • EU Urged to Embrace Harm Reduction

    EU Urged to Embrace Harm Reduction

    Photo: courtyardpix

    Medical and addiction experts called on the EU to embrace tobacco harm reduction during an event organized by the Centre for Economic and Market Analysis (CETA) in Prague.

    Debating how a tobacco-free generation—where less than 5 percent of EU-citizens use tobacco—can be achieved by 2040, they concluded that the objectives laid out in Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan cannot be attained under current circumstances and that a revised tobacco control policy based on scientific evidence is needed.

    “If the European Commission is serious about its plans to reduce the number of smokers and the impact of smoking, it must start considering the concept of risk reduction in the area of smoking,” said Czech National Drug Coordinator Manager Jindřich Vobořil, in a statement.

    “The Czech Government has committed itself to this approach in its program statement for the upcoming [EU] Presidency. I will also promote it in relation to the ongoing evaluation of the Tobacco Products Directive, which is an effective policy to achieve a real reduction in the number of smokers of conventional cigarettes,” he added.

    “The data show that the abstinence approach is inadequate. The solution for smokers is to switch to less harmful alternatives,” noted Ernest Groman, of the Vienna Nicotine Institute. The only European country close to the 5 percent target is Sweden. According to the experts, the low number of smokers is mainly due to the availability of less harmful alternatives.

    During the event, the CETA published a study ranking EU member states according to their ability to implement the concept of risk reduction. The Czech Republic finished second.

    The Czech government should use the upcoming EU Presidency to undertake a comprehensive review of tobacco dependence policies based on science rather than emotion, according to CETA Research Director Aleš Rod, who also sits on a Czech government advisory board.

  • KT&G Publishes Ethics Charter

    KT&G Publishes Ethics Charter

    Photo: KT&G

    KT&G on June 8 published its business ethics charter, which contains common standards of conduct for its companies, the firm announced in a statement.

    Approximately 20 people attended the proclamation ceremony for the “KT&G Group Ethics Charter” at the Courtyard Marriott Namdaemun Hotel in Seoul, including KT&G President Baek Bok-in, representatives of seven domestic subsidiaries and compliance officers.

    The third revision of the charter since its inception in 2003 aims to reflect the altered business environment, and covers global business expansion and reinforced ESG management, among other provisions.

    Based on the company’s management philosophy of “An upright company, a conscientious company, and a shared company,” the ethics charter contains eight themes and 31 items. The primary topics are business ethics, protection of assets and information, domestic and international transactions, and social responsibility. Responsible research and development and social media use were added as new subcategories.

    This ethics charter is distributed in eight languages to 21 companies, including overseas corporations and domestic and foreign subsidiaries. Moving away from the legal text format, it provides a more specific and understandable code of conduct through the use of descriptive phrases and the addition of practically applicable examples.

  • U.K. to Consider Khan Recommendations

    U.K. to Consider Khan Recommendations

    Photo: Iakov Kalinin

    The U.K. government said it will consider the recommendations of a report on smoking and publish its own plan in due course, Health and Social Care Secretary Sajid Javid said in a written statement to Parliament.

    “The independent review will help to inform our upcoming White Paper on Health Disparities, which we plan to publish this summer. To complement this, the department will also be publishing a new tobacco control plan in due course,” Javid’s statement said.

    Earlier this year, Javid commissioned an independent review into ways the government can help more people quit smoking and live healthier lives, led by Javed Khan, former CEO of children’s charity Barnardo’s.

    That review was published today. The key recommendations are: increased investment of an additional £125 million ($156.66 million) per year in smoke-free 2030 policies, with an extra £70 million per year ringfenced for stop-smoking services; raising the age of sale from 18 by one year every year until eventually no one can buy a tobacco product in this country; promotion of vapes as an effective “swap to stop” tool to help people quit smoking; and improving prevention in the NHS so smokers are offered advice and support to quit at every interaction they have with health services.

    Other interventions recommended in the report include a tobacco license for retailers to limit the availability of tobacco across the country; a rethink of the way cigarette sticks and packets look to reduce their appeal; and a mass media campaign to encourage smokers to quit.

    Creeping prohibition won’t stop young adults smoking. It will simply drive the sale of tobacco underground and consumers will buy cigarettes on the black market where no-one pays tax and products are completely unregulated.

    “My proposals are not just a plan for this government, but successive governments too,” said Khan. “To truly achieve a smokefree society in our great country, we need to commit to making smoking obsolete, once and for all.” The U.K. aims having 5 percent or fewer smokers by 2030.

    Smokers rights activists condemned the proposal to raise the age of sale of tobacco.

    “Creeping prohibition won’t stop young adults smoking. It will simply drive the sale of tobacco underground and consumers will buy cigarettes on the black market where no-one pays tax and products are completely unregulated,” said Simon Clark, director of the smokers’ group Forest.

    “Ultimately this is about freedom of choice and personal responsibility and ministers must think very carefully before they adopt prohibition and coercion as tools to achieve their smoke-free goal.”

    Mr. Khan unambiguously states that one of the critical ways the government can get its ambitions for a smoke free society back on track is through greater promotion of vaping.

    Tobacco harm reduction activists welcomed the report’s recognition of vaping as a tool to help smokers quit.

    “We couldn’t agree more with this report’s stark message for the government, which is that, without immediate action, it will miss its smoke-free targets by seven years,” said John Dunne, director general of the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA), in a statement.

    “The NHS [National Health Service] tells us that around 78,000 people in the U.K. die every year from smoking, with many more living with debilitating smoking-related illnesses, so the time for inaction is over.

    “Mr. Khan unambiguously states that one of the critical ways the government can get its ambitions for a smoke-free society back on track is through greater promotion of vaping, and the UKVIA, which represents vaping organizations including retailers, manufacturers and distributors, will do everything we can to support this.”

    Clark noted that encouraging smokers to switch to reduced-risk products such as e-cigarettes is sensible “as long as it is voluntary and based on educating consumers about the relative risks of different nicotine products.”

    Illustration: Office for Health Improvement & Disparities
  • BAT Reiterates Full Year Guidance

    BAT Reiterates Full Year Guidance

    Photo: BAT

    British American Tobacco reiterated its revenue guidance of £5 billion ($6.27 billion) for 2022, anticipating that its diversification into noncombustible products will pay off.

    The new business line “is increasingly contributing to group performance, and we are confident in delivering our £5 billion New Category revenue and profitability targets by 2025”, said BAT CEO Jack Bowles in a statement, adding that the company continues to drive value through its combustibles business.

    The noncombustible product consumer base reached 19.4 million in the first quarter of the year, according to BAT. In the first half of the fiscal year, the company invested more than £1 billion to build its brands in this product segment. Its portfolio of non-combustible products includes vapor products, nicotine pouches, tobacco heating products and other oral products.

    BAT’s Vuse vapor cigarette now holds a value market share of 35.9 percent in the U.S., up 3.4 percentage points in the year to date versus 2021. Vuse debuted in the U.K. in May and the company anticipates further rollouts for the second half of 2022.

    BAT said it continues to enjoy volume share leadership in Modern Oral in Europe, with 69.3 percent of the market.

    We are confident in delivering on our current financial targets, irrespective of the timing of the transfer of our Russian business.

    Like many multinationals, BAT has been impacted by the war in Ukraine, which has increased global uncertainty and disruption, further exacerbating inflationary pressures on supply chains. In March, BAT announced that its ownership of the business in Russia was no longer sustainable. The company is in the process of transferring its Russian business to a third party.

    “While we are not immune to these pressures, we are confident in delivering on our current financial targets, irrespective of the timing of the transfer of our Russian business,” said Bowles. “This is thanks to our well-established multi-category strategy, our strong portfolio of global brands and our resilient, highly cash generative business.”

    While considering BAT’s aspiration to reach £5 billion of sales and achieve profitability in its new products stream “achievable,” Ross Hindle, an analyst at Third Bridge, noted the significance of Russia and Ukraine to BAT. “Russia and Ukraine are very important heated tobacco markets, they are even more important for BAT than PMI, with 26 percent of their heated tobacco sales coming from the region historically,” he told Proactive.

  • Health Crises Worsened Vaping Confusion: Study

    Health Crises Worsened Vaping Confusion: Study

    Photo: kues1

    A new study led by researchers at the American Cancer Society (ACS) shows perceptions of e-cigarettes as being “more harmful” than cigarettes by adults in the United States more than doubled between 2019-2020 and perceptions of e-cigarettes as “less harmful” declined between 2018-2020.

    The study also found that an increase in cigarette smoking prevalence in 2019-2020 was restricted to those who perceived e-cigarettes as “more harmful” than cigarettes, while increases in prevalence of e-cigarette use was restricted to those who perceived e-cigarettes as “less harmful” than cigarettes.

    Prevalence of dual use of both products increased only among those who perceived these products as “equally harmful” or “as harmful.” The results coincide with the e-cigarette or vaping use-associated lung injury outbreak (Evali) and the Covid-19 pandemic. The data was published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine (AJPM).

    “While all tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, pose a risk to the health of the user, major health events, such as the Evali epidemic in late-2019 and the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, paved the way to new smoking/e-cigarette health risks,” the ACS wrote in a press release.

    “During this time, the quality and type of information individuals were exposed to may have shaped how they compare the potential harms of tobacco products, which in turn, may have altered tobacco use behaviors.”

    How individuals perceive the harm of e-cigarettes vs. traditional cigarettes can predict their individual decision to use tobacco products, but according to the study authors, this is the first study to provide evidence this relationship translates to population-based prevalence changes. 

    “While this study showed sharp changes in public perceptions of e-cigarette vs. cigarette harms during Evali and Covid-19, the more relevant finding for public health is that increases in cigarette smoking and e-cigarette use prevalence occurred primarily in individuals who perceived their preferred product as relatively less harmful,” said Priti Bandi, principal scientist, risk factors and screening surveillance research at the American Cancer Society and lead author of the study. “This suggests that public perceptions of e-cigarettes vs. cigarettes harms influences population tobacco use patterns.”

    In this study, researchers analyzed data from the National Cancer Institute-sponsored Health Information National Trends Survey collected from more than 10,000 U.S. adults from 2018-2020. The results showed perceptions of e-cigarettes as more harmful” than cigarettes doubled each year, increasing most between 2019-2020 (2018: 6.8 percent, 2019: 12.8 percent, 2020: 28.3 percent), while uncertainty (responses of “don’t know”) in relative harm declined (2018: 38.2 percent, 2019: 34.2 percent, 2020: 24.7 percent). “Less harmful” relative perceptions declined (2018: 17.6 percent, 2019: 15.3 percent, 2020: 11.4 percent), while “as harmful” perceptions remained steady (2018: 37.4 percent, 2019: 37.7 percent, 2020: 35.6 percent).

    Exclusive cigarette smoking increased between 2019-2020 among those who perceived e-cigarettes as relatively “more harmful” (2018: 18.5 percent; 2019: 8.4 percent; 2020: 16.3 percent), exclusive e-cigarette use increased linearly among those who perceived them as relatively less harmful (7.9 percent; 15.3 percent, 26.7 percent), and dual use increased linearly in those who perceived them as harmful (0.1 percent, 1.4 percent; 2.9 percent).

    “It is challenging for individuals to make conclusions about the short- and long-term health effects of tobacco products without clear, effective, and ongoing communication from public health authorities, especially when new contextual events that change health harms happen,” said Bandi.

    “There is a need for behavioral interventions to encourage individuals to be informed consumers of available scientific findings and appreciate that while no tobacco products is safe, there are inherent differences between relative and absolute harms between tobacco products that can influence behavior. In turn, public health education campaigns must facilitate informed decision making by translating emerging scientific evidence accurately to appropriate audiences.”

  • PMI Publishes ESG Protocol

    PMI Publishes ESG Protocol

    Photo: Deemerwha studio

    Following the introduction of PMI’s Sustainability Index, Philip Morris International made its ESG KPI Protocol publicly available. This document describes how the Sustainability Index will measure PMI’s progress toward reaching the goals outlined in its 2025 Roadmap and provides details about the 19 metrics that comprise PMI’s Sustainability Index. This announcement follows the release of PMI’s Integrated Report 2021, which includes details of the company’s Sustainability Index and the 2022 Proxy Statement, which provides details on how long-term executive compensation is linked to the company’s 2025 Roadmap through the Sustainability Index.

    The ESG KPI Protocol is a separate, dedicated explanation of the Sustainability Index’s mechanics. It includes the definition, methodology and scope of each of the Sustainability Index’s KPIs to provide measurable, verifiable, consistent and accurate reporting on progress.

    Through publication of its ESG KPI Protocol, PMI aims to provide further transparency on the key metrics used to measure how the company is progressing toward achieving its purpose and creating value for shareholders and other stakeholders. Further, the ESG KPI Protocol establishes a framework, which is specific to the company, and clearly defines KPIs that can provide the organization with a method for making the connection between the company’s purpose, strategic direction, financial performance and environmental and social considerations.

    We developed a clear process for establishing concrete definitions, documentation and controls for sustainability with the aim of standardizing how we measure ESG performance.

    “As sustainability matures and gains importance inside and outside our company, the question of how to measure ESG performance is something many continue to grapple with. Accordingly, we developed a clear process for establishing concrete definitions, documentation and controls for sustainability with the aim of standardizing how we measure ESG performance,” said Jennifer Motles, chief sustainability officer, in a statement.

    Additionally, PMI published its 2021 ESG Highlights—a data-driven document based on the company’s 2021 Integrated Report and tailored to complement investor relations materials. It aims to further strengthen investor engagement and understanding of the relevance and robustness of PMI’s sustainability strategy and transformation.

  • Kazakhstan to Ban Vaping

    Kazakhstan to Ban Vaping

    Photo: udmurd

    Kazakhstan will outlaw the sale and use of vaping devices, reports AKIPress, citing Member of Parliament Amanzhan Zhamalov.

    Lawmakers also decided to introduce an excise tax on “smoking sticks” at 70 percent of the excise tax on cigarettes. It wasn’t immediately clear from the AKIPress article whether “smoking sticks” refers to tobacco-heating sticks or something else.

    Earlier, the country’s national economy minister, Alibek Kuantyrov announced a plan to raise cigarette excise taxes to nearly $30 by 2024.  

    It was also suggested to raise excise taxes on other tobacco products, such as heated-tobacco, to harmonize tobacco product excise within the Eurasian Economic Union. According to the minister, this will require a staged increase in duties.

  • Taat Adds Southern California Locations

    Taat Adds Southern California Locations

    Photo: Taat Global Alternatives

    Taat Original, Smooth and Menthol are now sold in over 100 franchised stores in Southern California belonging to a major global convenience chain, an increase of more than 80 stores in eight weeks following an initial placement in 23 stores, the company announced in a press release.

    Taat established dialogues with the owners of these franchises through an independent association of franchise owners in Southern California who are part of the convenience chain’s network of over 9,300 stores in the United States and more than 70,000 stores worldwide. Approximately 35 percent of the initial group of franchised stores carrying Taat have already placed reorders.

    The company is currently planning to begin initiatives in Southern California to promote Taat Menthol in light of an upcoming ban of flavored tobacco products in Los Angeles set to begin on Jan. 1, 2023. On Wednesday, June 1, 2022, the Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted to ban the sale of flavored tobacco products, such as menthol tobacco cigarettes. Menthol tobacco cigarettes have proven to be exceptionally popular in Los Angeles, with 94.5 percent of tobacco retailers carrying products in this segment and 31.2 percent displaying menthol cigarette price promotions.

  • China Cracks Down on Tobacco Counterfeiters

    China Cracks Down on Tobacco Counterfeiters

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Chinese authorities seized 2.1 million counterfeit cigarettes, nearly 100,000 metric tons of leaf tobacco and about 1,700 cigarette-making machines between 2017 and 2021, reports China Daily. They also detained 44,000 suspects. The law enforcement actions prevented CNY100 billion ($15 billion) in lost tax earnings, according to the Ministry of Public Security (MPS), which coordinated its campaign with the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration (STMA).

    The joint crackdown targeted the production and distribution of counterfeit cigarettes in key areas. Authorities focused on disrupting the criminal networks’ logistics, strangling the supply of production materials for fake cigarettes at the source.

    Officials insisted the crackdown on counterfeiting will continue, with emphasis on combating activities such as illegal sales of leaf tobacco and illegal transport of cigarettes, and on cutting off the underground supply chain for the production and sale of counterfeit cigarettes.

  • China: E-Cig Licensing Rules Explained

    China: E-Cig Licensing Rules Explained

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    The law firm Kelller & Heckman has published an article summarizing the requirements for obtaining an e-cigarette manufacturing license in China.

    The State Tobacco Monopoly Administration (STMA) has now published a rule outlining the process for Chinese e-cigarette manufacturers to obtain the required manufacturer license. This rule applies not only to manufacturers producing e-cigarettes for the domestic Chinese market, but also to the manufacturing of e-cigarettes solely for export.

    According to Keller & Heckman, manufacturers will have to prepare many materials for their license application. Among other information, they will have to provide proof of suitable funds, production and sales information, including the balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement and production and sales statistics.

    E-liquid manufacturers will have to supply a license for operating dangerous chemicals and identify the sources of nicotine used in the past three years. Applicants for export must submit materials explaining the export business and the scale of export, including the customs declaration forms for the past three years

    Remarkably, the rules require companies manufacturing exclusively for export to obtain trademark registration in China. Although Keller and Heckman considers it unlikely that the STMA intended to impose the Chinese trademark registration requirement on exporters, the law firm advises clients to seek clarification from the authorities.