Category: Around the Industry

  • Greece Wants to Break Minors from Buying Tobacco, Alcohol

    Greece Wants to Break Minors from Buying Tobacco, Alcohol

    In the 2024 European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD), 77% of Greek 16-year-olds said they could buy e-cigarettes without checks and 65% said the same for cigarettes and tobacco. Ninety-two percent said it was easy to buy alcohol, in a culture where it’s not uncommon for children to buy such products to bring home to their parents. The government, however, wants that to change. 

    Proposed legislation would require checking identification to make sure buyers are of legal age, including for products such as vapes and cannabis items, with fines up to €10,000 ($11,385) and possible business closure.

    The bill has a digital registry for sellers and creates a specialized unit in the national health agency to monitor product circulation. ESPAD data showed 37% of teens reported binge drinking and 52% used vapes. 

  • Op-Ed: The Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill: A weapon against smokers

    Op-Ed: The Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill: A weapon against smokers

    By Dr Kgosi Letlape, Action SA MP and Harm Reduction Activist

    A responsible government creates safe spaces for smokers, spaces that do not affect non-smokers – but it cannot legislate them out of existence.

    When Nedlac presented its findings to the health portfolio committee at the end of May, scientific input was notably absent. There was no panel, no robust exchange of evidence from both sides, no effort to seek the truth. Just the same flawed logic repeated: harm is harm.

    But the greatest harm from tobacco comes from combustion. We’ve always known that. The health risks are not simply from tobacco itself, but from how it’s consumed. Patterns of use matter, take cigars, for example. Their impact is different, and historically, even tax policy reflected that distinction. But today’s conversation on tobacco regulation is being driven by a dangerous, unscientific mantra: harm is harm.

    This phrase is not grounded in science. I will not support a document built on hatred for smokers. Yes, hatred. That’s what this feels like. A continuation of the same oppressive mentality, now executed by a black government, to isolate and vilify people who smoke. It treats them as though they are incapable of making informed choices, as if they must be saved from themselves by a nanny state.

    We are being fed misinformation. Whether it is deliberate or not, it remains misinformation.

    It’s deeply concerning. This Bill doesn’t just regulate but criminalises. It imposes sanctions harsher than those for theft. It attempts to erase smokers from public life, as if to say: if you smoke, you don’t belong in South Africa. That violates the Bill of Rights. Yes, smokers have rights.

    We cannot allow policy to be shaped by fear and ideology instead of facts. When regulation becomes punishment, and health is used as a weapon, we lose the very essence of what it means to care. If we truly believe in equity, then we must meet people where they are – not where we wish they would be. Smokers deserve science-based support, not stigma disguised as law.

    As a doctor, I always tell patients: the best option is to quit. But if you can’t, I won’t condemn you. You deserve help. You deserve access to harm reduction tools. That is the essence of healthcare. It’s how we treat people with HIV, with cancer, with any addiction. Even in palliative care, when we can’t cure, we comfort. Why then, when it comes to smoking, do we abandon this principle?

    Harm reduction is science. Nicotine replacement therapy has existed for decades. There are safer alternatives to smoking. The UK’s National Health Service endorses vaping as a smoking cessation tool. Sweden has one of the lowest smoking rates in Europe, largely thanks to its embrace of snus. Japan’s uptake of heat-not-burn products has drastically reduced cigarette sales. These are not fringe cases. They are data-backed successes.

    Yet this Bill refuses to differentiate between products. It’s as illogical as saying all transport is the same – that bicycles and taxis should be regulated the same way because movement is movement. That’s not how we govern. That’s not how healthcare works.

    I’m not defending the tobacco industry. I’m defending people , South Africans who are being stripped of choice and dignity under the guise of public health. You don’t protect people by pretending they don’t exist. You protect them by giving them better options, by respecting their agency and by building policies around real-world behaviour, not idealistic fantasy.

    You don’t reduce harm by denying its existence, you reduce harm by confronting it with science, compassion and innovation. Likewise, a government serious about public health doesn’t ban lifeboats because it dislikes the sea.

    I also caution against relying uncritically on global bodies whose past missteps remind us that consensus often lags behind science. The World Health Organization, which once classified homosexuality as a disease, now struggles to provide a nuanced stance on tobacco harm reduction. History shows us why skepticism and scrutiny are essential.

    Worse still, this Bill centralises power in the hands of the Minister. Every aspect, from regulation to communication — is to be run by the health department. No independent bodies, no specialised institutions, just committees under the ministry. That is not how a transparent, functional health system operates. Medicines and vaccines are not approved this way. Why should harm reduction products be?

    The foundation of this Bill is flawed, and so the product is flawed. The agenda? It appears rooted in moral superiority, in puritanism. Smoking has been so demonised that smokers themselves may soon need to form rights groups. Meanwhile, the societal damage of alcohol — far greater in many respects, gets a free pass.

    This is not rational. And this cannot be passed into law. Not on my watch.

    Parliament’s job is to pass laws that are practical, fair, and based on real evidence. This one does not meet any of those standards. The idea that “harm is harm” needs to be challenged now, before it becomes law, causes damage, and builds prejudice into our legal system. We need clear thinking, balanced rules and respect for the rights of all South Africans, including smokers.

    We are a democracy. And in a democracy, public health policy must be grounded in science, reason and compassion – not in hate.

    Dr Kgosi Letlape, Action SA MP and Harm Reduction Activist.

  • Advocacy Groups Tell RFK Jr. Federal Tobacco Oversight Already Too Thin

    Advocacy Groups Tell RFK Jr. Federal Tobacco Oversight Already Too Thin

    Bloomberg is reporting that more than 80 public health organizations and advocacy groups sent a letter to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. this week voicing concern that recent cutbacks at the Department of Health and Human Services will hurt, or even reverse, decades of progress in reducing the use of tobacco products. Groups including the American Lung Association and Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said the Office on Smoking and Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products, were already stretched thin, and further layoffs would derail efforts to remove unauthorized products and hold tobacco companies accountable. The letter further argues that the FDA’s tobacco regulation is entirely funded by fees levied on the companies selling the products, so personnel cuts do not save any taxpayer money.

    The FDA is also grappling with a booming market for illegal flavored vapes, many of them imported from China. Despite lacking FDA authorization, these products have flooded US shelves, with some estimates suggesting unauthorized vapes now make up as much as 70% of the market.

    RFK Jr., who has supported shrinking the federal workforce and cutting “wasteful” public health spending, has not addressed how the layoffs will affect tobacco regulation. HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Bloomberg.

  • Sikary Debuts Cloud Zero in Dubai

    Sikary Debuts Cloud Zero in Dubai

    Sikary unveiled its latest device, the Cloud Zero 20,000 Puffs, at a product launch event in Dubai, marking its official entry into the Middle East market, using the slogan, “Vapor to Vaporless, One Click.”

    The company says the device offers the “industry’s first vaporless mode, which delivers zero visible emissions without compromising flavor or performance—setting a new standard for personal control and responsible use in both public and private environments.” It goes between that and the traditional vapor mode with a one-click switching mechanism.

    The company said Cloud Zero comes with a “750mAh battery, and type-C fast charging, the device delivers up to 20,000 puffs—minimizing recharges for all-day reliability, making it one of the most durable devices in its class.”

  • CAPHRA Condemns WHO’s Anti-Science Agenda on World Vape Day 

    CAPHRA Condemns WHO’s Anti-Science Agenda on World Vape Day 

    Yesterday (May 26), the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) challenged the World Health Organization’s anti-vaping stance as “scientifically bankrupt,” accusing it of endangering public health by ignoring evidence that safer nicotine products save lives. 

    The rebuke coincided with the upcoming WHO’s World No Tobacco Day on May 30, which CAPHRA claims weaponizes misinformation to justify prohibitionist policies.

    “The WHO’s ‘Health For All’ mantra rings hollow when it dismisses vaping’s life-saving potential,” said Nancy Loucas, CAPHRA’s Executive Coordinator. “Their 2025 theme masks a dangerous agenda: protecting cigarette markets by vilifying harm reduction.” 

    Loucas condemned WHO’s exclusion of consumer advocates from COP10 talks. “Silencing experts while citing debunked ‘gateway’ theories exposes their fear of facts,” she said. She highlighted stark contrasts as UK youth smoking halved to 3.6% since 2012 under regulated vaping, while Maldives’ vaping ban saw youth smoking rise 12%. 

    “Vaping is 95% safer than smoking, a fact repeatedly proven, and has contributed to a fast declining smoking rate in countries where it is regulated, that WHO ignores to appease anti-nicotine ideologues,” Loucas said. “This isn’t public health. It’s prohibitionist theatre that sacrifices smokers’ lives.

    “The WHO equates vaping with smoking, yet 82 million ex-smokers globally prove otherwise. Their 1980s-style fearmongering helps nobody but cigarette traders. This World Vape Day, we demand the WHO stop lying. Regulate vaping strictly, educate honestly, and watch smoking collapse. The UK model works. Ideological bans kill.” 

  • Manolios Added to Universal’s Board

    Manolios Added to Universal’s Board

    Last week, Universal Corporation announced the appointment of Fay Manolios to its board of directors effective June 1. In addition, Michael T. Lawton, who has served as an independent director since 2016, has decided to retire and will not stand for re-election to the board at Universal’s 2025 Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held August 5.

    Manolios brings over 25 years of experience in strategy development and human resources to Universal. She held increasing roles of responsibility at Capital One Financial Corporation from 2012 to 2022, most recently as managing vice president.

    “We are pleased to welcome Fay to our board,” said Preston D. Wigner, chairman, president, and CEO of Universal. “Fay is an accomplished executive with deep insight into human resources and a track record for helping to develop and reward high-performing organizations. Her expertise aligns with our commitment to setting high standards that benefit all Universal stakeholders, and we look forward to leveraging her insights as we continue to execute on our strategic initiatives across our tobacco and ingredients businesses.”

  • Study: Risks and Reasons for Intravaginal Tobacco Use 

    Study: Risks and Reasons for Intravaginal Tobacco Use 

    In  2023, a paper published in BMJ Tobacco Control examined intravaginal tobacco use among women in The Gambia, a growing trend in Sub-Saharan African countries that received little scientific attention. A subsequent study of the topic was launched in 2024, to be completed by the end of 2025.  

    In collaboration with research partners in the United States and The Gambia, the study looks at what motivates women who use tobacco intravaginally. It also documents tobacco use behaviors and assesses the chemical composition (including nicotine content) and level of toxicity of the products. The study examines both the sociocultural motivations behind the practice and the chemical composition of the tobacco used.

    Preliminary findings reveal that women use intravaginal tobacco for various reasons, including treating vaginal yeast infection, enhancing sexual pleasure, improving pregnancy and labor outcomes, and treating various health conditions including hypertension, asthma, and infertility. Findings also show that the product is often marketed by local vendors as traditional medicine, but may contain dangerous additives, including baobab ash, caustic soda, cannabis, and shea butter, raising concerns about its potential toxicological effects.

    The study is funded by the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use through the CDC Foundation, with a grant from Bloomberg Philanthropies.

  • Former China Tobacco Head Sentenced to 16 Years 

    Former China Tobacco Head Sentenced to 16 Years 

    Ling Chengxing, former head of China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, was sentenced to 16 years in prison for accepting bribes and abusing power. The sentence was handed down May 21, by the intermediate people’s court of Changchun in northeast China’s Jilin Province. He was also fined 4 million yuan ($560,000), while all his illegal gains must be recovered and turned over to the state treasury, the court sentence read.

    Ling was found to have accepted bribes worth 43.11 million yuan ($6 million) between 2006 and 2023, taking advantage of his various posts in matters of project contracting and business operations. Moreover, since 2015, during his tenure as Party chief and director of the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration and general manager of China National Tobacco Corporation, Ling was said to have “engaged in favoritism, corruption, and abuse of power in the process of facilitating and reviewing matters related to investment and equity acquisition, resulting in a loss of state-owned assets amounting to over 208 million yuan ($29 million), per the court verdict.”

  • CVA Says Vape Numbers are Being Misrepresented

    CVA Says Vape Numbers are Being Misrepresented

    The 2025 Canadian Health Survey on Children and Youth revealed a near 50% decline in youth vaping, with past 30-day use among Canadians aged 12–17 dropping to 7.2%, from 2019’s record-high of 13.2%.  

    Despite this clear progress, certain anti-vaping organizations continue to misrepresent data, inflating perceptions of youth vaping prevalence to justify restrictive policies that overlook the needs of adult consumers,” the Canadian Vaping Association (CVA) said.

    In December 2024, Health Canada published the first Canadian Substance Use Survey (CSUS) 2023, which included a redesigned sampling methodology aimed at improving the representation of respondents aged 15–24. Most importantly, the survey’s Technical Notes explicitly caution against comparing the CSUS 2023 results to prior studies, including the Canadian Tobacco and Drug Survey (2013–2017) and the Canadian Tobacco and Nicotine Survey (2019–2022), due to the fundamental methodological changes.  

    Despite this clear disclaimer, several prominent anti-vaping organizations erroneously compared the data regardless of the warnings, claiming “a third of teenagers vape” as a justification to fast-track flavor restrictions, according to the CVA. “By blurring the line between adult and youth use and disregarding Health Canada’s guidance, these groups distort public understanding, stifle meaningful health dialogues, and risk driving reactionary, unsound policy decisions,” the organization said.   

    “Misleading claims about youth vaping rates distract from the real public health opportunity: supporting adult smokers seeking less harmful alternatives,” said Sam Tam, president of the CVA. “With youth use at historic lows, policymakers should now focus on harm reduction for the 4.6 million Canadian adults who smoke, the group that benefits the most from regulated, less harmful alternatives.” 

    The CVA emphasized that vaping remains an important tool for those looking to get off cigarettes, restricting access or imposing excessive regulations on adult-focused products risks driving former smokers back to deadly tobacco use or unregulated products purchased from illicit markets. 

    “The data is clear: youth vaping has been declining since its peak in 2019,” Tam said. “However, it remains a critical issue, and CVA remains committed to prevention and education efforts to sustain this downward trend. Now is the time to build on this progress by ensuring that Canadians have access to accurate information and safer alternatives. We call on health leaders and policymakers to align strategies with the evidence: protect youth through continued education and stronger enforcement, while empowering adults to make informed choices and reducing the stigma around being a smoker.” 

  • Pakistani Tobacco Exporters Urge for Competitive Tax Model 

    Pakistani Tobacco Exporters Urge for Competitive Tax Model 

    At a meeting with Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan, Pakistani tobacco exporters warned that the current tax structure “poses a challenge,” especially for smaller players, and urged the government to adopt a more competitive taxation model. Exporters said the current tax structure—which includes federal excise duties, provincial excise duties, federal tobacco taxes, and a provincial development tax—totals Rs480.15 ($1.68) per kg.

    “They said this cost poses a challenge, particularly for smaller exporters and suggested that a more competitive taxation model would help enhance Pakistan’s position in the global tobacco market,” exporters said in a statement. The exporters emphasized that tobacco, like other agricultural commodities such as sugarcane, cotton, and citrus, should be supported through market-based policies. They noted that annual price adjustments are mandatory under current regulations, which can affect competitiveness in export destinations.

    The tobacco exporters also called for the revival of the Pakistan Tobacco Board to support coordinated efforts in export promotion and policy facilitation. In response, Kamal proposed the establishment of a Sectoral Council for Tobacco, similar to other existing sectoral councils, to provide a structured platform for industry dialogue and representation. 

    Pakistan’s tobacco exports reached $158.35 million in the current fiscal year (July–April), with promising growth in markets such as Belgium, UAE, Greece, and the Philippines.