Blog

  • IMF Calls for Risk-Proportionate Nicotine Taxes

    IMF Calls for Risk-Proportionate Nicotine Taxes

    A report by the International Monetary Fund earlier this month called for risk-proportionate taxation of nicotine products, arguing that excise policies should better reflect relative health harms. The IMF paper states that while newer alternatives such as vapes, nicotine pouches, and heated tobacco products are not risk-free, they expose users to fewer toxicants than combustible cigarettes and therefore warrant lower tax rates that can be adjusted as evidence evolves. The authors suggest that aligning fiscal policy with health outcomes could support smoking reduction by incentivizing consumers to shift toward less harmful products.

    Writing for Filter, Kiran Sidhu said the report has drawn support from tobacco harm reduction advocates, who say it reinforces longstanding arguments that price differentials can accelerate declines in cigarette use, citing examples such as New Zealand where lower-risk products and tax gaps have coincided with falling smoking rates. The report also implicitly challenges approaches backed by the World Health Organization that favor equal taxation across nicotine categories, warning that misaligned policies may sustain cigarette consumption or push users toward illicit markets, while emphasizing that taxation remains a key lever for shaping public health outcomes.

  • Altria Expands On! PLUS Retail Availability

    Altria Expands On! PLUS Retail Availability

    Altria Group announced the national retail expansion of its on! PLUS nicotine pouches, produced by its subsidiary Helix Innovations, marking a further step in its shift toward smoke-free products. The rollout follows initial availability in select states and e-commerce channels, with wholesale shipments beginning March 16, and nationwide retail distribution starting March 23. The product range includes mint, tobacco, and wintergreen variants in 6 mg and 9 mg strengths, and incorporates proprietary Nicoslik technology alongside a built-in disposal feature.

    The company said on! PLUS is the first product cleared under the U.S. Food and Drug Administration pilot program aimed at accelerating premarket review of nicotine pouch applications. The authorization allows Altria to market the six SKUs nationally, positioning the brand to compete in the growing oral nicotine segment as demand increases for non-combustible alternatives under evolving regulatory oversight.

  • New Zealand Partners with Vape Company That Sued it Five Times

    New Zealand Partners with Vape Company That Sued it Five Times

    Health New Zealand has partnered with Alt NZ Limited to supply free vape kits through 29 national stop-smoking services, distributing over 7,000 kits thus far. The NZD 500,000 ($295,000) procurement followed an open process requiring compliant closed-pod devices and refills, with strict adherence to tobacco control policies. Alt previously challenged the Ministry of Health in five court cases between 2023 and 2025 over nicotine limits, arguing its best-selling products exceeded 28.5 mg/mL and accounted for 85% of revenue. The courts largely upheld the Ministry’s regulatory changes, which lowered the maximum nicotine level from 50 mg/mL to 28.5 mg/mL.

    Alt director Jonathan Devery said higher nicotine strengths are more effective in helping smokers quit, while Health NZ noted the program begins users on 28.5 mg/mL for six weeks before tapering down. All products meet legal and compliance standards, with the Ministry emphasizing that regulated levels are sufficient to support cessation.

  • 22nd Century Group to Announce Q4, FY25 Results March 26

    22nd Century Group to Announce Q4, FY25 Results March 26

    22nd Century Group, Inc. announced it will host a webcast on March 26 at 8 a.m. ET to discuss its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 financial results, which will be released earlier that morning. Chairman and CEO Larry Firestone and CFO Dan Otto will review performance, outline recent progress, and provide an update on the company’s 2026 plans.

  • Organigram Says Proxy Firm for Sanity Group Purchase

    Organigram Says Proxy Firm for Sanity Group Purchase

    Organigram Global Inc., a leading licensed producer of cannabis, said proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. has recommended shareholders vote in favor of its proposed acquisition of Sanity Group GmbH ahead of a March 30 meeting. ISS cited strong strategic rationale, including increased scale, geographic diversification, and improved cash flow, as well as credible valuation and positive market reaction. The deal includes €113.4 million in upfront consideration, with additional earn-out potential, and is backed by Organigram’s board and its largest shareholder, BT DE Investments Inc., a subsidiary of British American Tobacco, signaling institutional confidence in the transaction.

  • Vape distributor JM Wholesale Files for Administration

    Vape distributor JM Wholesale Files for Administration

    Vape distributor JM Wholesale, based in Leicestershire, U.K., began the formal insolvency procedure by filing a notice to enter administration, with Quantuma expected to be appointed as administrator. The company, which distributes vape devices, e-liquids, disposable vapes, and nicotine pouches, previously claimed to be the U.K.’s largest distributor of its kind. According to its latest accounts for the year ending February 2025, JM Wholesale employed 47 staff, though no details have been provided on the reasons for the administration.

  • South Korea to Regulate Vapes as Conventional Tobacco

    South Korea to Regulate Vapes as Conventional Tobacco

    South Korea announced it will regulate synthetic nicotine e-cigarettes under conventional tobacco laws starting April 24, closing a loophole that previously exempted these products from oversight. Under the revised Tobacco Business Act, synthetic nicotine is treated like traditional tobacco, banning its use in smoke-free zones with fines up to 100,000 won ($69), requiring sellers to register as authorized retailers, and prohibiting online sales. The law also targets youth-focused marketing, limiting flavor descriptors and packaging imagery, with violations carrying fines up to 5 million won ($3,472).

    The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency reported a youth vaping rate of 2.9% in 2025, close to 3.3% for conventional cigarettes, with 61.4% of youth smokers using both. Health officials said the revision establishes a youth smoking prevention network aligned with WHO FCTC standards.  

  • Industry Mobilizing to Support UK Vapers

    Industry Mobilizing to Support UK Vapers

    The UK vaping industry is mobilizing to support adult smokers and protect access to vaping amid potential regulatory changes. The UK Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) will run the ninth annual VApril campaign in April 2026, providing evidence-based guidance, expert advice, and personal success stories to help smokers switch to vaping. The campaign also aims to raise awareness of the Tobacco and Vapes Bill — which would restrict flavors, packaging, and product displays — and to encourage vapers to engage with policymakers.

    Meanwhile, the New Nicotine Alliance has launched the Save Vaping campaign to oppose a proposed public vaping ban, warning it could push former smokers back to cigarettes, create enforcement burdens for businesses, and mislead the public on relative risk. Both campaigns provide resources for vapers to contact MPs, highlight successful quitting stories, and ensure consumers have access to reliable information on vaping as a safer alternative to smoking.

  • Zimbabwe Working to Stabilize Tobacco Market After Rocky Start

    Zimbabwe Working to Stabilize Tobacco Market After Rocky Start

    Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB) said it is working to stabilize the market as the 2026 season has gotten off to a rocky start, with early prices plummeting due to global oversupply and slow buyer participation. After two weeks, the average price had dropped 24% from last season to $2.66 per kg, with some bales selling for as little as 10 cents per kg.

    TIMB chief executive Emmanuel Matsvaire said several major merchants, who fund 85% of the crop, had not finalized their credit facilities by the time the market opened, creating a void of competition that allowed prices to bottom out. With those companies back in the fold, Matsvaire said the increased participation is helping prices trend upward. The board is also emphasizing better market intelligence to align Zimbabwe’s production with global demand, aiming to restore confidence among the country’s 100,000-plus growers

    Coming out of a record-shattering 2025 season where it produced 355 million kg of tobacco, Zimbabwe encouraged farmers to push for a national output of 400 million kg this year. However, China, the largest consumer of Zimbabwean leaf, reportedly lowered its orders by more than 10 million kg, sending TIMB to aggressively seek new export markets in the Middle East, Africa, and EU.

  • Luxembourg One of the Gateways China Uses to Flood EU With E-Cigs

    Luxembourg One of the Gateways China Uses to Flood EU With E-Cigs

    A new study by the Fraunhofer Institute calls Luxembourg one of four “gateway countries” that China uses to saturate the grey and black markets of Europe with e-cigarettes, along with Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Uwe Veres-Homm, head of risk and location analysis at Fraunhofer IIS, said more than 90% of e-cigarettes in the EU originate from China’s “global epicenter,” Shenzhen, where regulations for exported products are much more lenient than those staying in China. Regulatory import loopholes allow products that are legal, illegal, and/or improperly taxed and labeled to flood together, and once processed by customs in Luxembourg, they are considered EU goods and can enter the market elsewhere, he said.

    The study found that half of the e-cigarettes consumed in Luxembourg come from “irregular sources,” and said Luxembourg is attractive not only because of its strategic location, but also because it has low e-liquid taxes (€0.10/ml).

    The study concluded that banning e-cigarettes would not eliminate the grey and black markets and suggested harmonized EU standards and involving Chinese manufacturers to comply with EU laws as the products are being made.