Category: Events

  • Steady Footfall on First Day of WT Europe

    Steady Footfall on First Day of WT Europe

    Bulgaria’s deputy minister of agriculture, Momchil Nekov, opened the WT Europe exhibition in Sofia this morning. Describing the economic importance of tobacco to Bulgaria, along with the challenges and opportunities facing the business, Nekov stressed his government’s commitment to an orderly development of the sector.

    The event appeared to be well attended, with considerable crowds lining up to register when the Inter Expo and Congress Center opened its doors this morning. With more than 50 exhibitors, WT Europe is the first tobacco event to take place in Europe as the Covid-19 pandemic recedes, and many visitors said they relished the opportunity to meet people in person again following two years of lockdowns and video conferences.

    Show organizer Quartz Business Media said it was elated with the interest in its event. “We have experienced steady footfall all morning and look forward to two days of productive networking,” said Sales Director Colin Case. Several visitors commented on the high quality of attendees, a factor they said made attending the show more than worth their while.

    In addition to the exhibition, Quartz Business Media had put together an engaging conference with expert speakers from Euromonitor, the International Tobacco Growers Association and Universal Leaf Tobacco Co., among other prominent organizations.

  • For the Long Haul

    For the Long Haul

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Experts share their views on sustainability during the In Focus webinar.

    TR Staff Report

    Patricia Kovacevic

    Sustainability: We see and hear the word everywhere. But what does it mean for the tobacco and nicotine sectors? How are sustainable strategies meeting the needs of our businesses and stakeholders today while ensuring that future generations can also thrive?

    On May 5, a group of experts convened virtually at the In Focus webinar to explore how tobacco and nicotine are transforming to protect the future of people and the planet. Among other topics, they discussed product stewardship and leadership.

    The In Focus event series was launched in 2021 with the focus of the first event on tobacco harm reduction. The new series evolved from the prestigious Global Tobacco and Nicotine Forum and aims to explore vital themes in greater depth.

    The May 5 event featured five keynote speakers and two panel discussions and was moderated by Patricia Kovacevic, global legal and regulatory strategist and principal of RegulationStrategy.com.

    Pippa Bailey

    Pippa Bailey, head of climate change and sustainability practice at Ipsos U.K., a global market research and public opinion specialist, set out the concerns, perceptions and attitudes of people around the world toward climate change and sustainability. According to Ipsos, 83 percent of citizens across the globe believe that the environment is heading toward disaster. This is felt most acutely in South America where the impact of climate change has been greatest. Concerns around waste packaging and single-use plastics rank ahead of climate change, likely because this topic is very visible through dramatic images of polluted oceans and coastlines.

    Cigarette butts are the most littered product on the planet, and solving this problem will require both leadership and innovation, according to Bailey.

    Ipsos research shows that global citizens feel that they have given governments and businesses a mandate to address the environment. Sixty-two percent of citizens believe the Covid-19 pandemic was caused in part by people’s misuse of the environment

    Social and environmental concerns are becoming increasingly linked, and Bailey advised companies to avoid operating in environmental, social and governance (ESG) silos. Consumers do not think that way, she noted—so neither should companies. Instead, their approach should be more holistic.

    One challenge in achieving sustainability goals is the “say-do” gap, according to Bailey. While most citizens say that they care about the environment, their actions don’t always reflect their ambitions. Ipsos found that people tend to overestimate the impact of the actions they take. Businesses and governments, she says, need to make it easier for people to understand what more they could do to effect change.

    Behavioral change is a big part of getting consumers to recycle, according to Bailey. Citizens are not willing to pay extra to achieve that, however. They are willing to make the sustainable choice, but the financial and social benefits must be equal in their eyes.

    Erik Bloomquist

    Examining sustainability from a financial perspective, Erik Bloomquist, a global nicotine and tobacco investment consultant, noted that the main priority for investors is tobacco companies’ transition to harm reduction products that can drive returns in the future.

    In anticipation of the Foundation for a Smoke Free World’s 2022 Tobacco Transformation Index, Bloomquist presented data from 2020 to examine how much progress individual companies have made in shifting their business from combustible cigarettes to less harmful nicotine-delivery products. Product sales, capital allocation and expenditure are key criteria to assess that transformation, according to Bloomquist.

    He also presented data from the index showing how the companies’ price/earnings ratios compare with their Tobacco Transformation Index rating. Swedish Match, Philip Morris International and BAT topped the list.

    Bloomquist insisted that engagement, not exclusion, is key to progress and that investors support this.

    Adrian Payne
    Sarah Bostwick
    Liem Khe Fung
    Karen Hall
    Ronald Ngwira

    The first In Focus panel discussion, moderated by Adrian Payne, a consultant on corporate social responsibility and tobacco harm reduction, focused on leadership in a sustainable world.

    Sarah Bostwick, head of sustainability stakeholder engagement at PMI, described her company’s ambition to phase out cigarettes and build new businesses in healthcare and wellness. She said the company aims to generate substantial revenues from these segments.

    In the company’s 2019 sustainability materiality report, PMI set out how it accounts for internal developments and stays abreast of external trends. The company found that it could make the biggest difference by reducing the health impact of its products and addressing climate change. While the fist finding was expected given the health toll of smoking, the second was somewhat surprising considering that PMI’s operations have a relatively small environmental footprint.

    Bostwick also stressed PMI’s openness to stakeholders’ scrutiny and engagement.

    Ronald Ngwira, managing director of Pyxus Agriculture Malawi (PAM), detailed his company’s efforts to help meet global ESG targets. Working closely with the likes of Imperial Brands and PMI, PAM has reduced water usage by 60 percent. He said that building sustainability into the farmer base has been critical. From 2004–2010, Pyxus provided farmers with seedlings to help reverse deforestation caused in part by tobacco curing but with limited success. To make greater headway, the company decided to create its own tree plantations. Since 1991, Pyxus has planted more than 250 million trees worldwide, and in Malawi, PAM plants approximately 8 million trees each year.

    Ngwira said that Pyxus’ sustainability initiatives also cover actions to eliminate child labor and forced labor, with the company investing in education and product traceability, for example.

    Pyxus is leveraging its strong agricultural expertise to advance progress on key issues. In Malawi,  the company has not only become one of the country’s largest sustainable timber producers, but it has also invested in alternative crops, such as groundnuts, thus helping farmers diversify their income streams.

    Karen Hall, director of sustainability at Universal Leaf Tobacco Co., spoke about the challenge of growing tobacco as climate and social expectations change and are becoming more complex. In the face of global change, Universal Leaf is currently reviewing the resilience of its origins, setting ambitious but achievable goals, creating data-driven action to meet those goals efficiently and effectively, and preparing to adjust strategies as new information becomes available, she said.

    Liem Khe Fung, innovation director at cigarette paper manufacturer BMJ, pointed out that 99.9 percent of paper production relies on water and detailed his company’s plans to minimize water consumption without compromising product quality at a time when water is becoming scarce.

    Nathan Eaton

    Following the panel discussion, Nathan Eaton, executive director at NGIS, spoke about the potential of data and technology—particularly geospatial capabilities—to help address ESG challenges and commitments.

    While significant advances have been made in the fight against child labor, progress has recently slowed for the first time in 20 years. What’s more, it has been uneven across regions, sectors and age groups. Further progress will require new approaches and insights, according to Eaton

    Eaton described a collaboration with BAT to bring disparate data sources together. Showing a Google Map of southern Brazil—a major tobacco producing area—he demonstrated the ability to display variables such as distance to schools, access to safe drinking water and housing conditions—factors that may help identify at-risk communities and drive further progress in the fight against child labor.

    Juliette Le Roux Audren

    Juliette Le Roux Audren, environmental health safety product stewardship and sustainability manager for EMEA at Amphenol, argued that waste reduction requires a combination of regulation and innovation. Minerals such as tin, gold and cobalt are becoming scarcer, she noted, and the risk of scarcity is often underestimated. By redesigning and re-engineering products, the world can avoid scarcity. This will require companies to pivot from linear production cycles to circular production cycles. Le Roux Audren argued that companies need to navigate between risks and opportunities and that agile product stewardship will help them make more of their talents.

    Kevin Peng
    Jodie Clarke
    Edward Butt
    Gianmarco Guiduzzi

    The second In Focus panel, moderated by Edward Butt, group head of environment, social and government at BAT, centered on sustainable products and stewardship.

    Jodie Clarke, vice president of procurement and corporate security at Altria Client Services, explained that Altria is addressing societal and environmental concerns by engaging with all stakeholders. The company aims to create value not only for shareholders but also for society by driving responsibility through the value chain—for example, by reducing the harm to health associated with tobacco consumption; sourcing and distributing responsibly; striving for supplier diversity; supporting agricultural sustainability; promoting human rights; and ensuring ethics and compliance.

    Gianmarco Guiduzzi, head of sales and aftersales for Cerulean, detailed how Cerulean is putting sustainability at the heart of its equipment. He urged the industry to avoid working in silos and stressed that success requires the participation of people both upstream and downstream in the production process.

    For Guiduzzi, the challenge is how to replace existing raw materials for products such as cigarette filters with environmentally less harmful alternatives. For example, cellulose acetate—a critical component of cigarette filters—often ends up as litter on land and in water. Finding an alternative material with the same filtering characteristics is a challenge. Guiduzzi also challenged the industry to find an environmentally friendly replacement for polypropylene film in cigarette packs.

    One potential problem, according to Guiduzzi, is that each tobacco manufacturer is developing its own solution to these issues, and each will try to protect the associated intellectual property. While it is tempting for the larger multinationals to retain the fruits of their research and development, Guiduzzi said that, in order to create a level playing field and maximize the benefits, these solutions should trickle down to the wider sector.

    Guiduzzi also noted the rapidly growing popularity of nicotine pouches, which he said will present their own sustainability opportunities and challenges.

    Kevin Peng, advanced technology scientist at ALD Group, presented eco-friendly solutions developed by ALD, which are made from Poly (1,4-butylene succinate) (PBS), which is a biodegradable, semi-crystalline thermoplastic polyester synthesized through polycondensation of succinic acid and 1-4-butanediol, and another thermoplastic polyester, Polylactic Acid (PLA).

    Peng claimed ALD’s solution will reduce emissions as well as avoid/reduce waste. The device features a biodegradable shell and a long-life battery, and the lifecycle of the product is integrated into a holistic recycling system.

    Kate Rebernak

    Kate Rebernak, founder and CEO of FrameworkESG, urged nicotine companies to practice “radical transparency” in their operations, arguing that without such radicalism, revenues will decline, share prices will slide and investors will turn away.

    She pointed to the historical trust deficit suffered by the tobacco industry and urged companies to close the “say-do gap” by making sure that their actions match their words. As an illustration of how not to go about this, she cited U.S. companies publicly articulating their support for LGBTQ+ rights while at the same time financially supporting politicians who oppose such rights. She also gave the example of HSBC, which was recently reprimanded by the U.K. Advertising Standards Authority for advertising action against climate change while continuing to invest in fossil fuels.

    Rebernak suggested three ways for the tobacco industry to become radically transparent:

    1. Public-private engagement. She emphasized that a company cannot bring about change if it “isn’t in the room.” While acknowledging the hurdle presented by the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control’s Article 5.3, which aims to protect tobacco control policies from the commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry, Rebernak said the industry could attempt to overcome this hurdle by being radically transparent on its progress in tobacco harm reduction.
    2. Sharing business models, investments in R&D and marketing. The Foundation for a Smoke-Free World’s Tobacco Transformation Index, for example, calls for greater disclosure on each of the companies’ policy positions.
    3. Consumer behavior. Companies would be more successful at moving smokers away from combustibles to reduced-risk products if they were radically transparent about the risks versus the benefits. Crucially, she insisted, they should stop marketing products to children.
    Chris Greer

    The In Focus event also included a “fireside chat” on sustainability between Chris Greer, the president and CEO of Tobacco Reporter’s parent company, TMA, and Vincent Li of Hengfeng Paper, which celebrates its 70th anniversary this year. With 21 paper production lines and an annual production capacity of 230,000 tons, Hengfeng is one of China’s leading paper suppliers. For the cigarette industry, the company manufactures cigarette paper, plug wrap tipping base paper and paper for next-generation tobacco products.

    Vincent Li

    Papermaking has a considerable environmental impact due to the raw materials used (wood and water) and its energy requirements. In 2021, Hengfeng paper declared corporate carbon emissions of 3,139,297,000 tons. Following China’s national strategy to achieve peak carbon dioxide emissions by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060, Hengfeng aims to slash its CO2 emissions by more than a third in eight years.

    Because power generation and acquisition account for the lion’s share of Hengfeng’s global warming potential, it makes sense to focus mitigating measures there. The company plans to replace some of the coal it currently uses to generate power with energy sources that lead to less pollution. Among other initiatives, it intends to electrify parts of the papermaking process and build a 10 MW photovoltaic power station.

    Product design, too, offers opportunities to improve sustainability. By designing stiffer plug wrap papers, for example, Hengfeng enables cigarette manufacturers to use less acetate tow in their filters, thus reducing the proportion of a material that does not readily degrade in the environment.

  • Current Thinking

    Current Thinking

    Matt Holman (left) and Mike Ligon during TMA’s 103d annual meeting

    Matt Holman discusses the CTP Office of Science’s aspirations along with the challenges to achieving them.

    By Timothy S. Donahue

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been busy. Before it had the chance to finish the first round of premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) reviews, the agency’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) was charged with also regulating all synthetic and other nontobacco-derived nicotine products. Manufacturers must submit PMTAs for the newly regulated products by May 14, 2022.

    During the 103rd annual meeting of Tobacco Reporter’s parent company, TMA, Mike Ligon, TMA board chair, and Matt Holman, director of the FDA CTP’s Office of Science (OS), discussed the regulatory agency’s challenges and lessons learned in regulating electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS) and other novel tobacco products. It was the first time Holman had spoken publicly since Congress granted the FDA the authority to regulate synthetic products, and Ligon emphasized that the audience was eager to hear Holman answer questions.

    Holman made clear from the beginning that he heard during the conference that the FDA needs to do a better job with consistency, transparency and predictability. “That’s something I’ve strived to make sure we do as office director, but I’m hearing we’re not doing as good a job as we need to,” said Holman. “That’s something I’m certainly taking back to my colleagues to figure out … I think the point I’ve heard the most along those lines was just the timing and not knowing what the timing would be [for] taking action on applications. We need to do a better job of that.”

    After a federal judge ordered the FDA to complete a majority of PMTA reviews by Sept. 9, 2021—one year after the deadline for PMTA submissions—Holman said the review process was still new and that it was a challenge to build the programs necessary to complete reviews on time. He said that staffing the agency, for example, was a giant undertaking. “Something folks outside the agency don’t think about all that much is staffing levels. When I took over this position, we had something around 325 staff members that were in the office,” Holman explained. “And now, five years later, we have about 575-ish. Any of you who have not been in the federal government and tried to hire—it is a huge-level effort to hire that many people in that period of time; a huge-level effort … half my staff have come on board during the pandemic and have not met colleagues in person.”

    Holman said that the big-picture goal for the OS and FDA alike is creating an offramp for smokers to transition to less harmful products while minimizing any potential on-ramps for youth initiation, adding that youth use has been “decreasing the last couple of years, which is a really positive thing.” He also explained that the agency often hears a lot of criticism, some undeserved, surrounding the misinformation disseminated into the public by “stakeholders” (anti-nicotine organizations, health agencies, tobacco control groups, regulators and industry players).

    “We take all the feedback seriously … And we certainly actively encourage all stakeholders to engage with one another. I would hope to be able to sit here and say that I’ve been more successful than I have in that. There’s still a lot of resistance. There’s still a lot of really emotional, heated exchanges and feelings toward stakeholders,” said Holman. “I’m even seeing a shift in some of the stakeholder groups that have been aligned [previously] and now aren’t
    necessarily aligning.

    “I’ve just celebrated 20 years at the FDA in December. That entire 20 years, I’ve spent really actively engaging with all stakeholders, and I think it’s critical as regulators that we hear from and we talk with and we communicate—and we’re trying to be as transparent as possible—with all stakeholders. Unfortunately, I don’t control all the stakeholders. And I keep carrying this message forward. It doesn’t always get heard so well. And so, it’s still very much a work in progress.”

    Ultimately, Holman said the FDA is trying its best to base its decisions on the “good” science and not a specific source of data. “I don’t even care who the author is. I mean, the science is science,” he said. “Unfortunately, we have a lot of stakeholders that don’t look [at] it that way, and a lot that think they know what the policies shouldn’t be, and they want to come up with the science to demonstrate that. But we’re very aware of that. We’re very much looking out for that type of thing.”

    We take all the feedback seriously … And we certainly actively encourage all stakeholders to engage with one another.

    Being Approachable

    Holman said he understands the frustration of trying to combat misinformation. On the FDA’s side, he wanted to clarify at least some of the misunderstandings and misperceptions he commonly hears when stakeholders discuss the FDA. For example, he had recently heard a stakeholder saying that the FDA only had one economist on staff. “FDA has more than one economist,” he said. “The CTP has more than one economist. I want to be clear about that … You can agree or disagree with where economists land on their analysis. That’s fine. But just to say that we only have one economist—this concern is just a major misrepresentation of the situation.”

    There are also the rumors that the regulatory agency doesn’t read all the docket submissions (everything submitted to the agency, whether a comment on rulemaking or a PMTA). Holman said the quality of the submissions vary greatly, but the agency is required by law to look at every single one. “To suggest that the FDA’s regulators don’t carefully consider the data when we’re weighing options … at the end of the day, we have a public health mission where we’re here to serve,” said Holman. “We’re not here to oppose anyone. I look at data from all sources. I don’t care who it comes from … to suggest anything otherwise, at least for the FDA, honestly, it’s a bit insulting … you can criticize all you want about where we come out on decisions and rulemaking, but at the end of the day, we are very much a science-based organization.”

    The agency also tries to consider the unintended consequences of regulatory action, according to Holman. However, he explained that determining these factors, such as the growth of a black market, is complicated because there’s often not a lot of data. “It’s very much [speculating] what’s going to happen to the black market or the gray market when we take an action. We don’t often have data on that. So it’s really modeling or predicting,” he said. “We absolutely consider that because, at the end of the day … as I like to say to my staff, we’re trying to tackle this with a scalpel not a machete. Because I think that’s how you sort of leave this fine line that we’re all trying to leave here.”

    Ligon asked Holman whether the FDA’s approach to regulating next-generation tobacco products was a workable standard. Ligon wanted to know if the FDA still recognizes that tobacco products exist on a continuum of risk, with combustible cigarettes being the most harmful (the “continuum of risk” is the scientific concept that some nicotine-delivery systems are more harmful than others). Holman said that while the FDA doesn’t know precisely what the relative risks are of the different products on the spectrum, the agency still believes in the continuum of risk.

    “The challenge is having strong, rigorous data that we can stand behind and say, ‘Yes, we know this product is lower in risk than that product.’ That’s one of the biggest challenges still, I think, figuring out how to collect that data, what are the right types of studies, what’s the sort of full body of data that we need to be comfortable saying, ‘Yes, this product is down the continuum from that product,’” he said. “I think the other big challenge in this is … communicating with the consumers because if they don’t understand—and we know there’s a lack of understanding—a lot of misperceptions and misunderstandings [begin to grow].”

    Workable Solution

    Communication is key. Holman said that to better understand the process and the challenges that stakeholders are suffering, the agency needs to better communicate its thought processes and goals. Before the Covid-19 pandemic limited stakeholder interaction, the agency would hold workshops to hear directly from stakeholders about their concerns. Holman wants to bring back that level of communication.

    “We need to do workshops. It’s been almost a year since we’ve done the last workshop, and a whole heck of a lot of things have happened in that time period. We’re definitely going to take that back with our staff and talk about how to put some workshops together because the feedback we’ve gotten to date on the workshops we have done [previously] have been very positive,” said Holman. “Folks really appreciate the discussion. Not only to hear what we have to say, but just talks among attendees and some shared ideas and thoughts.”

    When asked if there were any suggestions from TMA attendees for workshop concepts, several stakeholders offered ideas. One stakeholder wanted to discuss with the FDA how PMTA data is managed and submitted to the FDA. The participant said that his company had received a deficiency letter; however, the additional data requested was already included in the company’s PMTA. Holman said that type of seminar would be a “win-win” for both the agency and the stakeholders.

    Another attendee suggested that the agency bring in consumers to allow the FDA to hear from them directly and to understand the consumers’ thoughts, behaviors and attitudes as well as the impact of potential regulations on possible future consumer behavior. “I just feel like there’s a gap,” the attendee said. “I really think that would do a lot in being able to bring all of us together to promote the science.”

    Other attendees wanted to have a better understanding of how the FDA comes to its decisions and what some of the common errors were in PMTAs that had received marketing denial letters. “I’m suggesting a little bit [of a] deeper dive by product category into the top 10 reasons you’re finding that something succeeds and [the] top 10 reasons you’re finding that something fails,” the attendee said. “I’m talking more about … here are the reasons why these fail … here’s why this doesn’t work.”

    Holman said the fundamental goal of the FDA is moving people down the continuum of risk. He said that the consumer
    is the most important part of the equation and that all stakeholders need to be better at getting less harmful tobacco products into the hands of adult combustible smokers. He said that he would hope that five years from now the tobacco product marketplace looks very different. Holman suggested that manufacturers with the ENDS products that exist now, alongside the “products we’re not even talking about that I know are in the pipeline” at various companies, should also consider using the agency’s modified-risk tobacco product (MRTP) pipeline
    moving forward.

    “I would hope that our MRTP program sees a lot more action and that we see a lot more modified-risk statements on products … And again, I think the lack of dialogue amongst stakeholders, and the lack of sort of any level of agreement, really thwarts communication because the information the consumers are receiving, it’s all over the place, right?” Holman suggested. “There’s a lot of misinformation out there that certain stakeholders convey that just doesn’t reflect the science. Just flat out doesn’t … if we could just get stakeholders to agree on some basic key communication points that we would all collectively share with consumers, I think we could really drive this forward. But right now, consumers are just confused.”    

  • Women in Tobacco to Meet in Paris

    Women in Tobacco to Meet in Paris

    The next Women in Tobacco (WIT) event will take place May 5-6 at Hotel Villa Modigliani in Paris. The event is sponsored by SWM.

    Patricia Kovacevic

    The event will kick off with a snack lunch on May 5, followed by the GTNF In Focus: Sustainability virtual conference in the presence of Patricia Kovacevic, who will moderate the event.

    The evening program features a Quayside dinner and a one-hour cruise on the river Seine.

    The GTNF In Focus conference continues May 6 and is followed by a team activity.

    Participants qualify for a special rate for the night of May 5 of €166 ($180.98) per room at Hotel Villa Modigliani with the code SWMWIT2022 .

    For hotel reservations please contact: llegal@vacancesbleues.fr or cpasquet@vacancesbleues.fr. Reservations may be cancelled free of charge up to April 14, 2022.

    To register for the WIT event, please contact Elise Rasmussen at witforwomen@gmail.com or +44 777 564 5048.

    WIT Agenda

    Thursday, May 5

    12:30 pm
    Welcome & snack lunch at the Hotel Villa Modigliani, 13 Rue Delambre, 75014 Paris, France

    02:00 pm
    GTNF inFocus Sustainability virtual conference in presence of Patricia Kovacevic who will moderate the event.
    Stay tuned and Check the program here or on the website: sustainability.infocusseries.org.

    08:00 pm
    Quayside dinner followed by a one-hour River Seine cruise.

    Friday, May 6

    08:45 am
    Welcome at the Hotel Villa Modigliani, 13 Rue Delambre, 75014 Paris, France

    09:00 am
    GTNF inFocus Conference Debriefing
    & Specific Presentations

    10:15 am
    Team Activity:
    Embark for a “Responsible World Tour!”

    12:30 pm
    Event closure

  • Coresta Announces its 2022 Congress

    Coresta Announces its 2022 Congress

    The 2022 Coresta Congress will take place online Oct. 10–28.

    The event will comprise daily, two-hour sessions or workshops (1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Central European Time) focused on a specific topic area with pre-recorded 10 minute to 12 minute oral presentations followed by a live Q&A with the presenters.

    Coresta’s Agronomy & Leaf Integrity and Phytopathology & Genetics study groups are soliciting the submission of papers relating to sustainability in tobacco leaf production, low nicotine, leaf chemistry, crop and environmental protection, genetics and plant breeding and supply chain integrity.

    The organization’s Smoke Science and Product Technology study groups are encouraging the submission of abstracts presenting scientific research related to conventional tobacco products and potentially reduced harm next-generation products such as e-cigarettes, heated-tobacco products and novel oral products containing tobacco-derived nicotine.

    The abstract submission deadline is May 20.

    For more information, visit www.coresta.org/events/coresta-congress-2022-35938.html.

  • USTC Plans Bankruptcy Exit

    USTC Plans Bankruptcy Exit

    Photo: USTC

    U.S. Tobacco Cooperative (USTC) has begun planning an exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy later this summer. The cooperative originally filed for protection in July 2021 to meet contractual obligations to its member growers while the company faced uncertainty presented by an ongoing class-action lawsuit.

    Oscar House

    “On February 2, after 17 years of litigation, we were able to reach economic terms of a settlement with the Lewis Class,” said USTC CEO Oscar J. House. “As we await final approval from the court this summer, we are beginning to prepare our exit from bankruptcy and continue providing the exceptional service and quality products our organization is known for across the globe.”

    USTC originally filed for protection in federal bankruptcy court to satisfy obligations to its 550-plus member-growers, 200-plus employees, suppliers and customers. The settlement and plan of reorganization will allow the cooperative to honor its commitments worldwide and emerge from bankruptcy well positioned to serve its member-growers. Details of the agreement will be provided in the ordinary course of obtaining formal court approval of the settlement and USTC’s plan of reorganization.

    “USTC is healthy and set for a sustainable, successful future,” continued House. “Throughout the bankruptcy process we have fulfilled all obligations to all stakeholders: our customers, grower-members, vendors and employees. Going forward we will continue to do so, stronger than ever.”

  • First Vapor Industry Trade Show of 2022 Opens in Vegas

    First Vapor Industry Trade Show of 2022 Opens in Vegas

    The first industry trade show of the year opened its doors yesterday in Las Vegas. The Tobacco Plus Expo (TPE) runs from Jan. 26-28 and brings together representatives from several segments of the vapor, tobacco and alternative product industries. The number of exhibitors this year increased significantly compared to last year’s show, which was held in May after being postponed for four months, rising to 425 exhibitors compared to 350 in 2021.

    Attendance for the first day of the show was an estimated 4,000 visitors, according to a TPE representative. That’s a nearly 30 percent increase from opening day for last year’s event which drew an estimated 2,500 to 3,000 visitors. The show didn’t “feel” like there were that many attendees, however, it’s such a large floorplan it would be impossible to guess an estimate.

    There was a noticeable reduction in the number of nicotine vaping companies showing on the floor. The impact of premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) and PACT Act regulation was evident. There were only an estimated 12–14 e-liquid vendors, including Coastal Clouds, BLVK E-liquid, Bantam, Pacha Mama and Ripe Vapes. There were eight to 10 hardware manufacturers, including Mi-One Brands, Myle, First Union and Vaporesso, and most of the manufacturers produced their own brands.

    There were also a few e-liquid brands selling products that have already received a marketing denial order (MDO) from the FDA. One company told Vapor Voice that there really isn’t much enforcement and getting warning letters is the only thing that has happened to them.

    There were, however, a very large number of disposable synthetic nicotine brands. One new brand at the show, Hook’d – with its tagline “one puff and you’re Hook’d” – seemed to take taunting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to another level according to Kim, a show attendee who asked not to use her last name. “Why would you put a brand out there like that,” she said. “It’s just disappointing.” A person working the Hook’d booth, when asked why the Hook’d name, told Vapor Voice the name was “just catchy.”

    Next year’s TPE is scheduled to take place Feb. 22-24, 2023. While most likely not an issue for vapor and alternative industry representatives, the TPE’s cigar segment may find itself split in several directions. Not only is that week traditionally when Procigar, the Dominican Republic’s cigar festival, takes place, it also may be competing against the Festival del Habano—Cuba’s cigar festival— that typically takes place in late February (traditionally the week after Procigar).

    In 2019, both festivals took place during the same week and were scheduled to take place the same week in 2022 before the Habanos festival was cancelled due to Covid concerns. Neither Procigar nor the Festival del Habano has announced dates for 2023.

  • Habanos Cancels 2022 Cigar Festival

    Habanos Cancels 2022 Cigar Festival

    Photo: Habanos

    The 2022 Habanos Festival has been officially canceled for the second year in a row.

    “Habanos S.A. has been working to celebrate the 23rd Habanos Festival scheduled for February 2022, but we are forced to cancel said celebration due to the new epidemiological situation of the coronavirus in the world,” the company wrote on its website.

    Instead, Habanos plans to treat its fans to the Habanos World Days, a virtual event that allows premium tobacco aficionados to share experiences and enjoying the rich culture that surrounds this exclusive handcrafted product.

    This virtual meeting debuted in 2021 with more than 9,000 aficionados from over 140 countries, 200 media outlets and more than 75,000 visits for three days. The program included a visit to the Habanos virtual stand featuring a special Humidor designed in commemoration of Cohiba’s 55th anniversary. During the event, Habanos unveiled the nominees for the prestigious Habanos 2020 Awards, which recognize outstanding personalities for their work in the categories of Communication, Business and Production; and the winning aficionados  for the online version of the Habanos World Challenge International Contest, which measures general Habano knowledge in its various stages of the process, from cultivation and production to enjoyment.

    The Habanos Festival highlights Cuba’s cigar culture, with farm visits, factory tours and product samplings along with lavish entertainment.

    Read Tobacco Reporter’s review of the 2020 Habanos Festival here.

  • Procigar and InterTabac Extend Partnership

    Procigar and InterTabac Extend Partnership

    Photo: alekosa

    The long-term partnership between Messe Dortmund and Procigar, the Association of Dominican Cigar Manufacturers, has been extended. The aim is to build on and grow the close partnership and teamwork of recent years.

    “What we have here is a unique partnership between the world’s biggest and best trade show in the tobacco sector and the world’s leading cigar exporter,” said Hendrik Kelner, Progicar’s president, in a statement. The principal objective of the Association of Dominican Cigar Manufacturers is to promote and defend the quality and consistency of Dominican cigars across the world. Only a globally recognized platform like InterTabac can be contemplated for this key task.”

    Procigar was founded in 1992 as an association of cigar producers in the Dominican Republic. Since 2008, Procigar has organized the annual Procigar Festival attracting more than 400 international guests, importers, wholesalers and retailers as well as tobacco industry suppliers and employees.

    The InterTabac trade exhibition will take place Sept. 15-17, 2022.

  • JT to Apply for Prime Market Listing on TSE

    JT to Apply for Prime Market Listing on TSE

    Photo: show999

    Japan Tobacco will apply to be in the new “Prime Market” segment of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the company announced in a press note.

     JT received assessment results of the initial listing criteria for the new market segment of the Tokyo Stock Exchange on July 9, 2021, confirming that the company complies with the listing criteria for the “Prime Market” segment.