Category: News This Week

  • E-Cig Batteries Power Drones in Ukraine War

    E-Cig Batteries Power Drones in Ukraine War

    Photo: Rakursstudio

    Ukrainian volunteers have started using e-cigarette batteries to help power drones deployed in the war against Russia, according to a report in The Independent.

    The batteries are being used to power release systems attached to drones so that they can carry and drop anything from medical supplies to grenades. The release systems are built using 3D printers.

    The initiative was developed in response to the rising price of lithium batteries. War-related airport closures have driven up the cost of many imports. To collect disposable e-cigarettes and retrieve lithium polymer batteries, the volunteers set up drop-off bins outside the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute

    “Lithium batteries used to cost $1 each but went up five times in price adding significantly to our costs,” says engineer and PhD student Maksym Sheremet. “So we started powering dropping systems from the batteries in disposable e-cigarettes. It’s free, easy to repurpose and environmentally friendly because we are recycling.”

    A team of around 60 volunteers are making the drone systems, with 30 working specifically on the e-cigarette plan.

    In four months they have built 4,000 dropping systems – which cost under $30 – and are sent to the front. They are also building drones from scratch and repurposing existing commercial drones to go with their dropping systems.

    Seriously outgunned by Russia, Ukraine relies heavily on drones, which allow its forces to spot artillery and so direct fire efficiently, saving ammunition.

  • Cigarette Firms Shift to Biodegradable Films

    Cigarette Firms Shift to Biodegradable Films

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Cigarette makers have shifted from regular plastic wrapping to biodegradable wrapping for cigarette packs, well ahead of the India’s single-use plastic ban, reports The Economic Times, citing the Tobacco Institute of India (TII).

    The single-use plastic ban took effect on July 1. The biodegradable material being used is compliant with international standards and the recently released BIS standards, according to the TII.

    “Biodegradation of the biodegradable plastic starts upon coming into contact with soil. This material is extremely beneficial, as it would biodegrade naturally in landfills as well. The biodegradable plastic will not add any strain to the solid waste collection and recycling system,” TII said in a statement.

    TII represents cigarette makers such as ITC, Godfrey Phillips India and VST Industries.

  • Taat Shares 2022-2023 Financial Outlook

    Taat Shares 2022-2023 Financial Outlook

    Photo: Taat Global Alternatives

    Following its recent acquisition of HLND Holdings, Taat Global Alternatives anticipates generating approximately CAD88 million ($68.31 million) in sales between June 1, 2022, and May 31, 2023.

    Repeat orders of Taat, which comprised over 54 percent of the company’s gross revenue in the second quarter of 2022, are expected to continue at a steady pace as the company services its existing accounts while capturing new market share.

    Anticipated revenues for the company’s fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 2022, are CAD92 million. Taat projects a loss on operations excluding non-cash items of CAD1.9 million. The company anticipates continued quarterly losses through the remainder of calendar 2022 as it invests heavily in brand-building, distribution and further development of its nationwide sales network.

    To exploit its recently acquired distribution capabilities, the company plans to expand the scope of its offerings beyond Taat Original, Smooth and Menthol, with the objective of also becoming a global player in nontraditional smokable and non-smokable products.

    Shifting its business model from being “product-centric” to “brand-centric,” the company expects to benefit considerably from its enhanced management capabilities between ADCO executive team members as well as the addition of 20-year global tobacco industry veteran Michael Saxon as CEO of Taat.

    “In the approximately 18 months since Taat was first launched in the United States, we have established a solid foundation through strong execution of our priorities as well as continued attention to research and development,” said Taat Founder Joe Deighan in a statement. “The advanced formulation of Beyond Tobacco known as V3 has proven exceptionally popular among adult smokers and we have proactively taken steps to replace inventory of Taat made with previous iterations, thus ensuring that V3 is as widely available as possible.

    “Our acquisition of ADCO provides us more than just distribution bandwidth, which is to say that we can obtain priceless feedback and various types of insights (whether qualitative or quantitative) to continuously evaluate the performance of a given product on the market and shape our business decisions accordingly to drive sell-through and long-term brand equity.

    “Perhaps most exciting, we are branching out into segments that complement our core offerings, such as Taat heat-not-burn as well as a zero-hemp formulation of Beyond Tobacco that can enable us to commercialize Taat more broadly at a global level. We anticipate great outcomes in the rest of 2022 and throughout 2023 and are keen to continue with actively commercializing Taat as a better alternative to legacy tobacco products.”

  • B2B Vaping Conference to Tackle ‘Big Issues’

    B2B Vaping Conference to Tackle ‘Big Issues’

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) will organize a B2B conference at the QEII Centre in London on Sept. 9.

    Among other topics, participants in the Vaping Industry Forum and Exhibition will discuss the challenge of tackling rogue vape traders, preventing underage access to e-cigarettes and creating a sustainable vaping industry.

    Entitled “Vaping for a Better Future,” the conference will also look at how the sector can maximize its public health, economic and social impact.

    The industry’s first ever economic impact report, conducted by the Centre for Economics & Business Research, will also be unveiled at the event.

    Confirmed speakers and panelists include Adam Afriyie MP, vice chair of the Vaping All Party Parliamentary Group; James Lowman, chief executive, Association of Convenience Stores; Pippa Bailey, head of climate change and sustainability practice, IPSOS Mori; Dan Marchant, managing director, VapeClub; Doug Mutter, director, VPZ; and Siyang Yu, global marketing manager, SMOK

    The event follows the government-commissioned independent review into tobacco control policies—the Khan Review—which has recommended that vaping feature prominently as a tool to meet England’s smokefree target by 2030.

    “This year’s Vaping Industry Forum is set to be the biggest yet,” said John Dunne, director-general of the UKVIA, in a statement. “The conference and exhibition come at a hugely exciting time for the vaping industry following the extremely positive Khan Review which has presented vaping as having a pivotal role in making smoking obsolete. It also comes ahead of the highly anticipated publication of the new Tobacco Control Plan.

    “Whilst vaping presents a huge public health, economic and social opportunity for the nation there are a number of challenges that the industry has to face up to. The Khan Review is placing its trust in the vaping industry to play a critical role in its harm reduction strategy, and we’ve got to show that we are a highly responsible industry that can live up to the government’s high expectations.”

  • EPA Ruling Threatens FDA’s Tobacco Plans

    EPA Ruling Threatens FDA’s Tobacco Plans

    Photo: renaschild

    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision to block the Environmental Protection Agency from curbing power-plant emissions also threatens the Food and Drug Administration’s attempts to limit nicotine and ban menthol in cigarettes, according to an article published by Bloomberg Law.

    In their ruling, the Supreme Court judges endorsed a legal approach that requires agencies to obtain Congressional approval to address issues of major financial or political importance in novel ways. The court’s conservative members have lamented the power agencies have to create and enforce their own rules.

    According to Lindsay Wiley, a professor at UCLA School of Law, the decision will be considered in any situation where an administrative agency is trying to solve a problem using authority given to it by Congress in more general terms.

    In the case of tobacco, the FDA will face greater pressure to prove it is authorized by Congress to propose its draft ban on menthol in cigarettes and cigars and other major rule changes, according to Marc Scheineson, a former FDA commissioner.

    While the Tobacco Control Act gives the FDA the authority to adopt product standards—including on the content of cigarettes—through notice and comment rulemaking, legal experts believe the June 30 court ruling will embolden tobacco manufacturers to challenge the menthol ban and other policies once they are finalized.

    “It definitely provides a roadmap that the industry will follow trying to attack the menthol regulation with everything they can come up with,” said Joelle Lester, director of commercial tobacco control programs at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law’s Public Health Law Center.

  • RJR Vaping Technology Claims Invalidated

    RJR Vaping Technology Claims Invalidated

    Photo: utah51

    A U.S. administrative tribunal has invalidated two claims in a R.J. Reynolds vaping patent, reports Law360.

    The Patent Trial and Appeal Board said on June 30 that two claims in U.S. Patent No. 9,814,268, which covers “a tobacco-containing, electrically-powered smoking article” designed to burn a minimal amount of tobacco, can’t stand because they are obvious in light of previous e-cigarette patents.

    The ruling represents a second win for Philip Morris Products after a Virginia federal jury awarded it more than $10 million last month in drawn-out clash between the tobacco giants.

  • Court Tosses Punitive Award Against PM

    Court Tosses Punitive Award Against PM

    Photo: burdun

    A U.S. federal appeals court tossed out a $9 million punitive-damages award awarded by a lower court against Philip Morris USA in a case filed by a woman who suffered a smoking-related illness that led to her legs being amputated, reports The Free Press.

    Donna Brown filed the lawsuit in 2007 in the federal Middle District of Florida, and a jury sided with her on claims for strict liability, negligence, fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal. It awarded Brown nearly $8.29 million in compensatory damages and $9 million in punitive damages.

    In its appeal, Philip Morris pointed to a recent Florida Supreme Court opinion that said plaintiffs must show that they relied on misleading information from cigarette makers to prevail on claims for fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal.

    In its June 30 ruling, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Brown had presented “insufficient evidence” to show that she relied on specific false or misleading statements by the company.

    The Atlanta-based court overturned the verdicts on the fraud-related claims but upheld the verdicts against the cigarette maker on strict liability and negligence.

    The lawsuit was one of thousands of cases filed against tobacco companies after a 2006 Florida Supreme Court decision established critical findings about issues such as the dangers of smoking and misrepresentation by cigarette makers. Those lawsuits are known as Engle Progeny cases.

  • Report Supports Vaping as Smoking Alternative

    Report Supports Vaping as Smoking Alternative

    Photo: andriano_cz

    A new report published by Belgian’s Superior Health Council supports vaping as a safer alternative to smoking or as a quitting aid that can significantly reduce health risks.

    Based on the current state of knowledge, the report concludes that the exclusive use of e-cigarettes by (ex-)smokers—provided that they actually stop smoking—could lead to a significant reduction in health risks

    The report also states that vaping is not risk-free and is therefore not recommended for nonsmokers, especially the young. Further long-term safety data are needed.

    The council prepares scientific advisory reports to guide Belgian political decisionmakers and health professionals. The report took two years to prepare and was a consensus document prepared by a wide range of experts with different views.

    While restrictions on vaping are prudent the report warns that “limiting vaping and other nicotine use does not jeopardize the goal of reducing the prevalence of smoking.”

    Advocates of tobacco harm reduction welcomed the report. “Wisely, the guidelines advise risk-proportionate regulation of vaping,” wrote Colin Mendelsohn, a medical professional and founding chairman of the Australian Tobacco Harm Reduction Association, on his website. “Vaping is much less harmful than smoking and should be regulated much more lightly in line with the lower risk.

  • Panama Bans Vaping Imports and Sales

    Panama Bans Vaping Imports and Sales

    Photo: searagen

    Panamanian President Laurentino Cortizo has signed legislation banning the sale of vapor products, reports Vaping360. The country had already prohibited e-cigarette sales in 2014 by executive decree.

    The new law prohibits not only sales and imports of e-cigarettes, but also bans consumption in any place where smoking is not allowed. The ban includes internet purchases and authorizes customs officials to inspect and seize shipments. Resellers are still allowed to import vapor products intended for export to third countries.

    Consumer vaping advocates have warned that restrictions on vaping products will push vapers to illegal products of questionable quality.

    Panama joins more than a dozen Latin American and Caribbean countries with vape bans. On May 31, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador signed a decree outlawing the sale of e-cigarettes.

    Panama will host the 1oth Conference of the Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in 2023.

  • Activists Outraged Over Vaping Policy Guidance

    Activists Outraged Over Vaping Policy Guidance

    Photo: pixarno

    Tobacco harm reduction activists are outraged over a new Australian government document on vaping.

    The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) recently published its 2022 CEO Statement on Electronic Cigarettes, which provides guidance to public health policymakers.

    According to the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA), the document falsely claims that vaping is not an effective quit-smoking tool, but a gateway to smoking with most vapers becoming dual users. Vaping, the document states, also increases the risk of smoking relapse. The NHMRC exaggerates the health impacts, poisoning and explosion risks of e-cigarettes, according to CAPHRA, while references to toxins and potential harms are made without a fair comparison to smoking.

    “This latest government document on vaping makes outrageously false claims and will only cost more Australian smokers their lives,” says Nancy Loucas, executive coordinator of CAPHRA.

    “Ridiculously, Australia’s chief medical officer considers vaping the next biggest health issue after COVID-19. Has he ever heard of smoking which kills over 20,000 Australians every year? This 18-page document is a complete joke. It is full of statements that can be easily debunked by international science and human evidence the world over,” says Loucas.

    This egregious document is not worth the paper it’s written on, yet it’s now the bible for public health guidance in and around Australia.

    CAPHRA says Australia’s hardline anti-vaping approach is increasingly out of step with other Asia Pacific countries, with the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand set to lift their vaping bans. What’s more, New Zealand, across the Tasman, is already operating under a regulatory framework that has seen smoking rates decline.

    “This egregious document is not worth the paper it’s written on, yet it’s now the bible for public health guidance in and around Australia,” says Loucas.

    It is illegal to sell, supply or possess nicotine vaping products, with Australia the only Western democracy that requires a nicotine prescription to vape. Alarmingly, 2.3 million Australians continue to smoke cigarettes.

    Last year Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration expanded its prescription-only model with customs clamping down at the border on the likes of personal imports of nicotine vaping liquids from overseas websites.