Category: News This Week

  • Analysts: Nicotine Reduction Takes Time

    Analysts: Nicotine Reduction Takes Time

    Photo: Maksym Yemelyanov

    Industry analysts expect the implementation of any plan to mandate lower nicotine levels for cigarettes sold in the U.S. to take a long time.

    Tobacco stocks plunged on April 19 after The Wall Street Journal published an article suggesting the Biden administration is considering a policy that would require tobacco companies to reduce nicotine levels in cigarettes to nonaddictive levels.

    Industry analysts, however, said this process will be lengthy, according to an article published by CSP.

    “While we see a very long and uncertain road to establishing a legally enforceable nicotine standard, we believe there is heightened headline risk, and the likelihood for a nicotine standard to ultimately be implemented exists,” Bonnie Herzog, a managing director of Goldman Sachs, said in a research note.

    If the Biden administration moves forward with its plan, Herzog said she would expect cigarette volumes to decline dramatically and more people to convert to reduced-risk products and technologies.

    Nik Modi, analyst at New York-based RBC Capital Markets, said in a research note that he’s cautious of becoming too invested in potential consequences at this time because nicotine regulation is just a consideration.

    If the regulation moves to the next step, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would have to release a notice of proposed rulemaking and consider potential consequences. At a minimum, there is a mandatory one-year to two-year delay between issuing a final rule and policy implementation, Herzog said.

    Among other things, the agency would have to consider whether lowering nicotine levels would increase consumption of cigarettes because of reduced-risk perceptions, and if its policy would boost black market sales or unregulated home manufacturing.

    At a minimum, there is a mandatory one-year to two-year delay between issuing a final rule and policy implementation.

    Commentators have already warned against unintended consequences of a low-nicotine mandate. Such a policy would stimulate illicit trade and could result in more smoking-related illness, wrote Brad Polumbo, a policy correspondent at the Foundation for Economic Education (FFEE).

    “Were the amount of nicotine in cigarettes lowered by law, many people would respond by smoking more total cigarettes to get their nicotine fix. Because it is tar and other carcinogenic substances in cigarettes that cause cancer—not the nicotine itself—this would likely mean more cases of lung cancer and more premature deaths,” he wrote on the FFEE website.

    What’s more, smokers unhappy with the new weak cigarettes for sale at legal outlets may turn to black markets to buy stronger variants, according to Polumbo. “Because black market dealers have little business accountability or oversight, there’s a greater chance that the products could be laced with dangerous substances or dangerously made,” he wrote.

    The argument of compensatory smoking is disputed by 22nd Century Group, a company specializing in low-nicotine tobacco that stands to gain considerably from a nationwide low-nicotine mandate.

    “Public health researchers have conclusively refuted the common misperception that reduced-nicotine content cigarettes could cause smokers to increase their smoking, saying, ‘Effectively compensating to maintain nicotine exposure is virtually impossible when switching to cigarettes with minimally addictive nicotine content,’ and, ‘[M]andated reduction in nicotine content is unlikely to result in an increase in smoking behavior to obtain more nicotine,’” the company wrote in a statement about the topic.

    Nik Modi

    Analysts also noted that policy implementation could be delayed by legal challenges from the tobacco industry. Cigarette manufacturers could challenge or sue the FDA if they think the agency isn’t acing in accordance with regulatory guidelines or overstepping boundaries, said Modi.

    The current discussion about lowering nicotine dates from 2018, when the FDA introduced its Comprehensive Plan for Tobacco and Nicotine Regulation.

  • Zimbabwe Earns $50 million From First Sales

    Zimbabwe Earns $50 million From First Sales

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Zimbabwean leaf tobacco sales totaled $49.9 million after the first nine days of trading, compared to $24.5 million during the same period in 2020, the Tobacco Industry Marketing Board (TIMB) reported.

    Leaf growers delivered 19.97 million kg during the first nine days, up 83 percent over the 10.8 million kg from like 2020. This season’s crop garnered an average price of $2.50 per kg to date, up from $2.27 per kg at this point last season.

    However, farmers’ unions are displeased with current leaf prices, which dropped during the second week of the marketing season.

    “The first week of this tobacco selling season saw the firming of prices above $5 per kg; some tobacco was sold at $6.30 per kg, which was paid by contractors,” said Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union President Shadreck Makombe. “Prices at direct auction hovered around $4.99 per kg. Every merchant was out fighting to dominate. In the second week, most contractors dropped prices. They are now buying at a discounted price. This is a big blow to most of the farmers who are contracted and are the majority of tobacco growers. They cannot sell elsewhere.”

    Prior to the start of the marketing season, industry representatives expressed concern about tobacco growers’ ability to repay their debts.

  • Altria, Juul Likely to Face Suit Over Deal

    Altria, Juul Likely to Face Suit Over Deal

    Photo: jessica45 | Pixabay

    Altria Group and Juul Labs will likely face a proposed antitrust action seeking to unwind a $12.8 billion deal that gave the tobacco giant a 35 percent stake in the vapor company, reports Bloomberg Law, citing a “tentative” ruling by a federal judge in San Francisco.

    Judge William H. Orrick indicated Wednesday that he’s inclined to let most of the lawsuit move forward in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, where it was consolidated after dozens of antitrust plaintiffs sued over deal clauses calling for Altria’s exit from the vaping market.

    The Federal Trade Commission has also sued over the Altria-Juul transaction.

  • Smoker Group Forest to Host Webinar on Vaping

    Smoker Group Forest to Host Webinar on Vaping

    Simon Clark

    To mark the last week of VApril, the U.K.’s annual vaping awareness month now in its fourth year, the smokers’ lobby group Forest is hosting a webinar on April 28 to discuss “Should smokers switch to vaping?”

    “E-cigarettes have been a mainstream consumer product for the best part of a decade, and vaping is credited with encouraging millions of smokers to switch to what evidence suggests is a significantly reduced-risk product,” says Forest director Simon Clark.

    “Despite that, millions more seem resistant to switching, and the latest figures suggest that the number of vapers in the U.K. may have fallen from a peak of 3.6 million to 3 million. The question is, why?”

    Speakers at the virtual meeting include John Dunne, CEO of the U.K. Vaping Industry Association; Joe Dunne, spokesperson for Respect Vapers in Ireland; and Daniel Pryor, head of programs at the Adam Smith Institute think tank.

    “Confirmed smokers are often excluded from public debates about vaping and smoking cessation,” says Clark. “It’s misguided because their views are essential to understanding why more smokers don’t want to quit or switch.

    Confirmed smokers are often excluded from public debates about vaping and smoking cessation.

    “We believe adults should have the freedom to make informed choices, so this is an opportunity for confirmed smokers to learn more about reduced-risk products, and for vaping advocates to understand why many smokers still prefer combustible tobacco and to respect that choice.”

    Forest’s webinar will take place on April 28 from 18:00–19:00 U.K. time.

    For further information and to register, click here.

  • Board Authorizes 97 Million kg for Karnataka

    Board Authorizes 97 Million kg for Karnataka

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The Tobacco Board of India has authorized a 2021–2022 crop of 97 million kg for Karnataka, 9 million kg more than in the previous growing season, reports The Times of India.

    “We have decided to fix the crop size of Karnataka at 97 million kg keeping in view the demands of growers as well as traders,” said board Chairman Raghunatha Babu, adding that the board had also taken into consideration global demand.

    The board had originally authorized a 99 million kg crop for Karnataka in 2020–2021. However, after considering the seriousness of the Covid-19 pandemic, it reduced the crop size to 88 million kg.

    Some analysts expressed surprise at the crop size increase, given that global demand for tobacco has slipped in the wake of the pandemic.

    Tobacco growers who switched to producing ginger following the crop size reduction reportedly suffered heavy losses, increasing pressure on the board to increase the crop size for 2021–2022.

    Meanwhile, tobacco growers in Andhra Pradesh threatened to stall auctions from Monday if there is no marked improvement in the prices offered for their produce, according to a report in The Hindu.

    Due to the rising number of Covid-19 cases and uncertain global demand situation, exporters have adopted a wait-and-see approach, citing a lack of confirmed orders.

    “We were hoping to recoup the losses incurred last year as the virus-induced lockdown coincided with the peak marketing season, said farmers’ representative Mareddy Subba Reddy.

    “We will not hesitate to stall the auction from next week if the market continues to remain lackluster, said V.V. Prasad, a farmer’s welfare association leader at the Ongole II auction platform.

    To date, Andhra Pradesh famers have marketed only 12.5 million kg of their 70 million kg crop. The 6.5 million kg Southern Light Soils tobacco sold earned a price of INR167 ($2.23) per kg while the 6 million kg Southern Black Soils tobacco sold for INR165 per kg, according to the Tobacco Board.

  • Covid Paper Retracted Over Industry Links

    Covid Paper Retracted Over Industry Links

    Photo: Soloviova Liudmyla

    The European Respiratory Journal has retracted a scientific paper claiming current smokers are 23 percent less likely to be diagnosed with Covid-19 compared to nonsmokers after it was discovered some of the paper’s authors had financial links to the tobacco industry, reports The Guardian.

    The World Health Organization has warned that because smoking impairs lung function, there is an increased risk of severe symptoms if respiratory infections, including coronaviruses, are acquired by smokers. Covid-19 is an infectious disease that primarily attacks the lungs.

    But the paper, published in July last year by the European Respiratory Journal, found “current smoking was not associated with adverse outcome” in patients admitted to hospital with Covid-19 and claimed smokers were at a significantly lower risk of acquiring the virus.

    The article was originally published “early view” on July 30, 2020. Subsequent to this, and prior to publication of the version of record in an issue of the European Respiratory Journal, it was brought to the editors’ attention that two of the authors had failed to disclose potential conflicts of interest at the time of the manuscript’s submission.

    I disagree with the retraction, and I consider it unfair and unsubstantiated.

    Jose M. Mier at the time provided consultancy services to the tobacco industry on tobacco harm reduction. Konstantinos Poulas at the time was a principal investigator for the Greek NGO NOSMOKE, a science and innovation hub that has received funding from the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, which in turn has received funding from the tobacco industry.

    After careful review of the manuscript content alongside the new disclosures brought to light, the editors and society agreed that if these conflicts of interest had been disclosed at the time of manuscript submission, the editors would not have considered the article for publication.

    The European Respiratory Society has bylaws in place that do not permit individuals with ongoing relationships with the tobacco industry to participate in its activities.

    The editors of the European Respiratory Journal acknowledged that, aside from the failure of two contributing authors to disclose their conflicts of interest relating to the tobacco industry, at no point was there a question of any scientific misconduct on the part of any of the authors.

    The senior author of the paper, Konstantinos Farsalinos, said in a statement to the website Retraction Watch that the conflicts of interest “were irrelevant to the study’s main aims and objectives.”

    “Additionally, I proposed to publicly release the full dataset and the statistical script so that all findings could be independently verified,” he said. “The editors declined. I requested my proposal to be mentioned in the retraction letter, but that was also rejected by the editors. I disagree with the retraction, and I consider it unfair and unsubstantiated.”

  • Charlie’s Pachamama Sell Out in 21 Days

    Charlie’s Pachamama Sell Out in 21 Days

    Brandon Stump
    (Photo: Charlie’s Holdings)

    Charlie’s Holdings has sold its entire initial stock of Pachamama Disposables e-cigarettes in fewer than 21 days, making Pachamama the fastest-selling new product in the company’s history, according to a press release.

    “It is estimated that more than 20 percent of the world’s population consumes nicotine in some format,” said Brandon Stump, CEO of Charlie’s Holdings. “We believe that our new technologies and products can provide adult consumers with a better, more responsible and therefore more enjoyable means of experiencing nicotine.

    “Now that we have launched Pachamama Disposables in the United States, later this year, our distribution will expand into more than 75 international markets, where we expect to introduce millions of adult consumers to the extraordinary Pachamama sensory experience. We are very excited about what this launch—and the new $600 million market opportunity—will mean for our customers and our company.”

    We are very excited about what this launch—and the new $600 million market opportunity—will mean for our customers and our company.

    Earlier this month, Charlie’s Holdings raised $3 million through the private sale of common stock to the company’s founders, Brandon Stump and Chief Operating Officer Ryan Stump. The company intends to use the proceeds from the offering to drive substantial future growth, facilitate new product launches, increase working capital, retire outstanding debt and for other general corporate purposes.

    The proceeds from the private placement will strengthen the company’s balance sheet, accelerate European growth, allow for expansion into the Middle East and facilitate the company reaching several important near-term milestones, including FDA approval of Charlie Holdings’ premarket tobacco product application.

  • Activists Enlist UN to Press U.S. on Menthol

    Activists Enlist UN to Press U.S. on Menthol

    Photo: simisi1 from Pixabay

    Health groups want the United Nations to pressure U.S. regulators to ban menthol tobacco products, citing evidence that manufacturers market directly to Black communities, reports Bloomberg.

    Nearly 100 advocacy groups, including the African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council, the American Heart Association and Action on Smoking and Health, will appeal to the U.N. Human Rights Council to restrict the marketing of menthol-flavored products in the U.S. on the grounds that Black Americans are targeted by tobacco companies.

    “The decades of well-documented racialized and predatory tobacco industry targeting of African Americans, specifically with menthol flavoring, is a human rights issue,” the groups said in the letter to be sent on Wednesday.

    The Food and Drug Administration is expected to unveil new regulations on menthol tobacco products on April 29 in answer to a lawsuit filed last year by the African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council in which advocates argued the agency has repeatedly failed to act.

    The likelihood of a ban on menthol cigarettes in the United States is increasing as the impact of menthol cigarettes on Black Americans becomes clearer, according to an article in The New York Times.   

    An estimated 16,000 Black Americans die from lung cancer each year, and deaths due to smoking are about 18 percent higher for Black people than white people, according to the University of California, San Francisco Smoking Cessation Leadership Center.

    Congress has already banned all other flavors from being added to tobacco products.

  • Study: HnB No Less Harmful Than Cigarettes

    Study: HnB No Less Harmful Than Cigarettes

    Photo: Kuznietsov Dmitriy

    The impact on lung cells of heat-not-burn (HnB) tobacco products may be no less harmful than that of conventional cigarettes, according to the authors of a small comparative study published by Thorax.

    HnB products contain nicotine and tobacco but have been marketed by the tobacco industry as a less harmful alternative to conventional cigarettes on the grounds that they don’t produce specific harmful chemicals that are released when tobacco burns.

    Smoking heightens the risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease and abdominal aortic aneurysm because it has a role in all stages of artery hardening and blockage. And it causes emphysema and pulmonary hypertension because it contributes to the damage of blood vessels in the lungs.

    Specifically, it contributes to endothelial dysfunction—whereby the lining of small and large blood vessels becomes abnormal, causing arteries to constrict instead of dilating or blood vessels to become more inflamed; oxidative stress—an excess of harmful cellular byproducts; platelet activation—creation of “sticky” blood; and plaque development that can block arteries.

    The researchers wanted to find out if these effects could also be observed in people who used HnB products.

    So they compared endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress and platelet activation in 20 nonsmokers (average age 28), 20 long-term conventional cigarette smokers (average age 27), and 20 long-term users of HnB products (average age 33).

    The conventional smokers had been puffing away for an average of 3.5 years, getting through 13 sticks a day; the HnB users had been getting through around 11 products every day for an average of 5 years.

    The findings showed that compared with not smoking, long-term use of HnB products was associated with reduced endothelial function and increased oxidative stress and platelet activation.

    And there were no significant differences between conventional cigarette smokers and users of HnB products.

    This is an observational study, so it can’t establish cause. And the researchers acknowledge several limitations to their findings.

    These include the small numbers of study participants involved, the lack of random allocation to each group and the inability to confirm that a participant wasn’t a dual user of both conventional cigarettes and HnB products.

    If confirmed by other large studies, these findings could provide evidence to strongly discourage nonsmokers to start using [HnB products].

    Nevertheless, they conclude, “If confirmed by other large studies, these findings could provide evidence to strongly discourage nonsmokers to start using [HnB products] and to encourage [conventional cigarette] smokers to quit smoking.” In a second linked study, a team of researchers assessed whether the use of HnB products helped Japanese workers to give up tobacco for good.

    They offered a smoking cessation program to 158 users of conventional cigarettes (94) alone and/or HnB products (64) between November 2018 and April 2019.

    The workplace program included prescription varenicline or nicotine-replacement therapy (NRT), counseling and information about stopping smoking.

    The quit rate was logged in August 2019, when 45 (29 percent) of the workers had successfully stopped using all tobacco products.

    Those who availed themselves of pharmacological support were more likely to quit than those who didn’t (67 percent vs. 11 percent) as were those who received counseling (69 percent vs. 21 percent).

    Analysis of the results showed that people who used varenicline or NRT were three times more likely to stop smoking tobacco than those who didn’t.

    But those who either used HnB products alone or in addition to conventional cigarettes (dual users) were 23 percent less likely than exclusive cigarette smokers to give up tobacco altogether, after accounting for age, tobacco dependence, previous quit attempts and use of pharmacological support.

    This, too, is an observational study, and the researchers acknowledge that their study was small and restricted to healthy men in just one workplace. Smoking status was also self-reported and assessed at a single time point, and successful quitters weren’t asked how long they had stopped using tobacco.

    But they point out that those who used HnB products in their study did so because they thought they were less harmful than conventional cigarettes.

    “It is possible that the rhetorical phrases by tobacco industries attract and make consumers misunderstand that changing from cigarettes to [HnB products] can provide a healthier environment for themselves and their surroundings,” they suggest.

    “Although [HnB products] are misunderstood to be less harmful, they expose users and bystanders to toxicants, and the evidence does not show that [they] will reduce tobacco-related diseases,” they add.

    “Given that [HnB products] undermine cessation among smokers without providing health benefits, [they] should not be recommended for any purpose,” they conclude.

    In a linked editorial covering both research papers, Professor Irina Petrache of National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado, and Esther de Boer of University of Colorado agree.

    “[Both] reports provide impetus to conduct larger randomized validating studies and to assess the impact of [HnB products] on additional health parameters. Their work enriches the mounting evidence that [HnB products] are not safer than [conventional cigarettes], suggesting that any tobacco use should be strongly discouraged,” they write.

  • RJR Challenges Philip Morris Vapor Patent

    RJR Challenges Philip Morris Vapor Patent

    Image: USPTO

    R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co. (RJRV) has petitioned the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for a review of six claims relating to the basic functionality of e-cigarettes in a patent assigned to Philip Morris Products, reports Law Street Media.

    RJRV argues that the patent describes an approach that dates from 1990 and has “become accepted in view of its comparatively easy technical realizability in combination with its convincing functionality.”

    According to the filing, there are disadvantages in the prior technology that the asserted patent claims to fix, such as the increasing contamination of the vaporizing unit throughout its life, a fluid leak and that due to its design, the e-cigarette’s length cannot be shortened.

    RJRV takes issue with the patent’s six claims on the basis that to a person having ordinary skill in the field, it would have been obvious to combine previous inventions to overcome the claimed deficiencies.

    RJRV requests the cancellation of the claims as unpatentable.

    It’s not the first time that Reynolds and Philip Morris have quarreled about intellectual property. In June 2020, Philip Morris International filed counterclaims against Reynolds for patent infringement in the federal court action that RJR commenced against PMI and Altria, PMI’s IQOS distributor in the U.S., on April 9, 2020 in the Eastern District of Virginia.