Category: Around the Industry

  • ATNF Releases Draft Agenda

    ATNF Releases Draft Agenda

    The American Tobacco and Nicotine Forum (ATNF) announced the draft agenda for its 2026 program set for April 20–22, at the Lansdowne Resort in Leesburg, Virginia. ATNF is the nation’s leading annual conference focused on the future of the tobacco and nicotine industries, serving as a global forum for the exchange of ideas among public health experts, government officials, industry leaders, and investors. Formerly known as the TMA Annual Meeting, the conference has been held continuously for more than 110 years.

    ATNF 2026 plans to feature an innovation product showcase and a wide-ranging program examining science, regulation, litigation, and tobacco harm reduction. Agenda highlights include sessions on the use of artificial intelligence in product research, lessons from the FDA’s nicotine pouch pilot authorization program, pathways to meaningful PMTA reform, state and local policy impacts on harm reduction, enforcement and marketplace integrity, litigation affecting smoke-free products, and strategies for communicating harm reduction to adults who smoke. Additional panels will explore women’s leadership in tobacco and nicotine law, streamlining product reviews through smokefree standards, and the evolving role of advocacy in advancing tobacco harm reduction.

    Click here to register.

  • Calif. Court Denies Injunction for Cigar Companies in UTL Suit

    Calif. Court Denies Injunction for Cigar Companies in UTL Suit

    A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge denied a request by premium cigar manufacturers and trade groups to block enforcement of California’s Unflavored Tobacco List (UTL) requirements. On Monday, January 12, Judge Cherol J. Nellon rejected the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction in Rocky Patel Premium Cigars Inc. et al. v. Bonta, a state court case challenging emergency regulations tied to Assembly Bill 3218. The lawsuit was brought by Rocky Patel Premium Cigars, Cigar Rights of America, the Premium Cigar Association, and six other cigar manufacturers.

    The plaintiffs argued that the regulations impose duplicative and burdensome SKU-by-SKU submissions on premium cigars that they contend are already unflavored under federal law. Judge Nellon found the plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits and failed to show irreparable harm.

    The case stems from California’s creation of the UTL to enforce the state’s 2020 ban on most flavored tobacco products, requiring tobacco items to be approved for sale in the state. Plaintiffs sought to exempt “premium cigars” from the UTL, relying on a federal definition developed through FDA litigation, but the court held that the regulations lawfully apply to all tobacco products subject to the statute and do not exceed the attorney general’s authority. Nellon noted that the legislature chose a different approach to defining premium cigars and that the UTL rules are reasonably aimed at distinguishing unflavored products from prohibited flavored ones. This state ruling follows similar denials of relief in related proceedings and is separate from a parallel federal lawsuit involving the same parties and law but different legal claims.

  • Murder of Tobacco Company Owners Tied to $5.5M Fraud Case

    Murder of Tobacco Company Owners Tied to $5.5M Fraud Case

    The two owners of All-American Tobacco LLC, brothers Charles (age 67) and Richard (72) Geragi, were fatally shot inside their office Monday (January 12) in Boynton Beach, Florida. Authorities say they were having a meeting with Nesar Dawla, apparently discussing repayment of stolen funds linked to his brother, former company accountant Sadman Dawla.

    Investigators say Sadman Dawla admitted to embezzling more than $5.5 million from the tobacco importing business between 2016 and 2022 and was convicted last year on grand theft and money laundering charges, with sentencing scheduled this week. Police said Nesar Dawla shot the brothers, fled the scene in an SUV, led officers on a brief pursuit, and died by suicide before the vehicle crashed into a tree. Court filings show All-American Farms (the parent company of All-American Tobacco) had sued both brothers and others over the fraud, alleging Nesar Dawla received nearly $47,000 in stolen funds; the civil case was settled in mid-2024.

  • Korea Health Insurance Loses Appeal Against Tobacco Cos.

    Korea Health Insurance Loses Appeal Against Tobacco Cos.

    South Korea’s National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) lost its appeal seeking compensation from major tobacco companies after the Seoul High Court upheld a lower court ruling in favor of KT&G, Philip Morris Korea, and British American Tobacco Korea today (January 15). The court agreed that NHIS lacked legal standing to claim damages, ruling that insurance payouts made to smokers with cancer merely fulfilled statutory obligations and did not constitute a legally protected interest that could support a compensation claim.

    The lawsuit, originally filed in 2014, sought 55.3 billion won ($37.6 million) to recover health insurance costs for smoking-related lung and laryngeal cancer patients, arguing tobacco firms should be held liable for the financial burden imposed on the public health system. Both the lower and appellate courts rejected claims that cigarettes were defectively designed or misleadingly marketed, and found that smoking was not the sole cause of cancer. While acknowledging the growing medical costs linked to smoking—estimated at 3.8 trillion won ($2.6 billion) annually by 2023—the appellate court ordered NHIS to bear appeal costs. NHIS said it plans to take the case to the Supreme Court, framing the issue as one of public health accountability and constitutional social rights.

  • PCA’s Tips for Posting Industry-Related Material on Social Media

    PCA’s Tips for Posting Industry-Related Material on Social Media

    The Premium Cigar Association (PCA) published an article focused on posting tobacco-related content on social media, saying Meta (the parent company of Facebook and Instagram) has intensified enforcement around content linked to regulated industries, increasingly limiting the reach and visibility of posts even when they do not clearly violate written policies. Much of this tightening, the article says, is driven by automated and AI-based moderation systems and evolving internal standards, resulting in reduced feed placement, recommendation blocks, or suppressed exposure without clear warnings. While this creates challenges, accounts are still able to post if they adapt their approach to align with Meta’s enforcement environment.

    The PCA advised shifting away from direct product promotion toward lifestyle, educational, and community-focused content, while avoiding explicit sales language, pricing, or calls to purchase. Using neutral captions, lifestyle imagery, and modest hashtags can help reduce enforcement risk, though inconsistencies remain common. Given the unpredictability of social platforms, businesses are also encouraged to diversify communication by strengthening owned channels such as websites, email newsletters, SMS lists, and in-store engagement, with storytelling and education proving most effective for sustaining audience connection.

  • IQOS Curious X Debuts at Zamna

    IQOS Curious X Debuts at Zamna

    Philip Morris International (PMI) launched its global collaboration between IQOS and the Zamna music festival last week, according to Marvin magazine, with its IQOS Curious X platform debuting at Zamna 2026 in Tulum, Mexico. The engagement platform featured a dedicated IQOS experience zone aimed at adult smokers and adult nicotine users, aligning music and immersive environments with PMI’s smoke-free positioning.

    Leonardo de Alencar, director of smoke-free products at Philip Morris Mexico, said festivals such as Zamna provide a space to engage adult audiences and support the transition away from cigarettes, while Zamna executives described the partnership as part of a broader push for creative and cultural innovation. Zamna originated in Tulum, and this year will host additional music festivals in Egypt, Malta, and Türkiye.  

    PMI said IQOS now has more than 34 million adult users globally, including over 140,000 in Mexico.

  • OK Rules Replacing Tobacco Trust Members Unconstitutional

    OK Rules Replacing Tobacco Trust Members Unconstitutional

    The Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled that a 2025 state law allowing elected officials to replace members of the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) board at will is unconstitutional, affirming the voter-approved independence of the trust and safeguarding its authority to allocate tobacco settlement funds free from political interference. Established by constitutional amendment in 2000, TSET manages most of Oklahoma’s payments from the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement. The court’s decision preserves the original intent of voters to insulate TSET from political influence and ensures the continuation of its public health mission, a position supported by leading medical and public health organizations that filed an amicus brief backing the trust.

  • Dutch Insurance to Cover Three Attempts to Quit Smoking per Year

    Dutch Insurance to Cover Three Attempts to Quit Smoking per Year

    New health insurance guidelines in the Netherlands that took effect January 1 allow smokers to receive reimbursement for up to three quit attempts per year, a move public health advocates say could significantly boost long-term cessation rates. Data show smokers enrolled in support programs are six times more likely to remain smoke-free for a year, with success rates rising to nearly 30% in the most intensive programs. Despite decades of decline, smoking still affects about 18% of the population—rising to 30% among those with lower education levels—and experts note it takes an average of six attempts to quit for good. While stop-smoking courses cost around €400 per attempt, campaigners argue the expense is outweighed by potential healthcare savings, with studies estimating billions in avoided medical costs and tens of thousands of cancer cases prevented if smoking rates fall sharply over the next decade.

  • Digital Connectivity, Collaboration Helping PMI Evolve in Saudi Arabia

    Digital Connectivity, Collaboration Helping PMI Evolve in Saudi Arabia

    Philip Morris International (PMI) says rapid shifts in consumer behavior are reshaping the tobacco and nicotine market in Saudi Arabia, driven by greater digital connectivity, global exposure, and rising expectations around transparency and product experience. In an interview with the Saudi Gazette, Christian Akiki, managing director of Philip Morris Saudi Arabia Trading, said Saudi consumers are increasingly informed, vocal, and open to alternatives, pushing brands to better understand local preferences while maintaining clear and authentic communication. This evolution, he said, has supported growing interest in smoke-free products such as heated tobacco devices, nicotine pouches, and e-cigarettes, which have become more established in the Kingdom over the past decade.

    Akiki said PMI’s smoke-free strategy in Saudi Arabia relies heavily on cooperation with regulators, particularly the Saudi Food and Drug Authority, emphasizing that progress depends on science-based dialogue and aligned oversight. He pointed to the earlier launch of nicotine pouches by Badael, a Public Investment Fund company, as evidence of regulatory openness to alternative products. PMI also highlighted the importance of local talent and market-specific strategies, noting that approaches successful in other countries do not automatically translate to Saudi Arabia. According to Akiki, Saudi Arabia’s advanced digital infrastructure and Vision 2030 agenda provide a favorable environment for innovation, positioning the market as a potential benchmark for science-driven tobacco harm reduction initiatives globally.

  • N.J. Tightens Cannabis Rules, Allows Workers to Unionize  

    N.J. Tightens Cannabis Rules, Allows Workers to Unionize  

    New Jersey is tightening oversight across its cannabis and hemp markets, with new laws reshaping labor rules and retail competition. Assembly Bill No. 4182, now enacted, establishes a comprehensive labor framework for cannabis workers and other private-sector employees not covered by the National Labor Relations Act. The law places organizing and collective bargaining under the Division of Private Employment Dispute Settlement, grants it broad enforcement powers, and authorizes penalties of up to $10,000 per violation, or $20,000 in serious cases. Cannabis workers are explicitly guaranteed rights to organize, bargain collectively, and engage in protected activity, while employers face strict limits on retaliation, surveillance, and anti-union practices.

    At the product and retail level, New Jersey has also moved to rein in intoxicating hemp under S-4509/A-6295, creating a new regulatory scheme aligned with federal law and repealing earlier permissive rules. The legislation phases out sales of intoxicating hemp products at gas stations, convenience stores, smoke shops, and liquor stores by November 13, with key restrictions beginning in April. Licensed cannabis dispensaries have welcomed the move, arguing it curbs unfair competition from loosely regulated outlets, while the law preserves protections for licensed hemp farmers operating under the state’s Hemp Farming Act.