Category: Featured

  • Scandinavian Tobacco Reduces Share Capital

    Scandinavian Tobacco Reduces Share Capital

    Photo: STG

    Scandinavian Tobacco Group will reduce its share capital from DKK93 million ($13.4 million) to DKK87 million by canceling some of its treasury shares, the company announced on its website. The board of directors resolved to complete the capital reduction on May 25, 2023, and the reduction of the share capital has been registered with the Danish Business Authority.

    Following the capital reduction, the company’s share capital amounts to nominally DKK87 million divided into 87 million shares of DKK1 each. The total number of voting rights is 87 million.

  • Tobaccoville Announces Water Recycling Facility

    Tobaccoville Announces Water Recycling Facility

    Reynolds American Inc. will build a water reclamation plant at the Reynolds Operations Center in Tobaccoville, North Carolina, USA.

    To be constructed by NextEra Energy Resources, the WaterHub facility is projected to reclaim more than 60 million gallons of water a year, equivalent to the annual water supply of approximately 550 average U.S. households.

    “We are so proud to embark on the WaterHub project with NextEra Energy Resources at our flagship operations center in the U.S.,” said Bernd Meyer, executive vice president of operations at Reynolds, in a statement. “This project is not only a first for Reynolds but for the entire global BAT Group and is an important step toward reaching Reynolds’ water stewardship targets for 2025. Through the WaterHub, Reynolds is playing its part in the BAT Group’s progress against its goal of 35 percent less water withdrawn across global operations.”

    NextEra Energy Resources’ WaterHub installation includes plans to break ground on the project in Tobaccoville in the fall of 2023. The project is forecasted to be finalized and fully operational by the end of 2024.

  • ITGA Confronts Tobacco Growing Critics

    ITGA Confronts Tobacco Growing Critics

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    In the run-up to the World Health Organization’s World No Tobacco Day on May 31, the International Tobacco Growers Association (ITGA) is calling on the tobacco sector to raise awareness about the reality of tobacco growing to counterbalance the anticipated negative messaging.

    “Our sector will once again become subject to unfounded and damaging claims,” the ITGA writes on its website, adding that growers have been unfairly excluded from discussions at the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.

    “By ignoring tobacco growers’ legitimate concerns, the livelihoods of millions of people are put at stake,” the ITGA writes.

    On its website, the organization has crafted retorts to common criticisms of the sector. For example, in response to the frequently aired accusation that tobacco growing is bad for the environment, the ITGA points out that tobacco covers only 0.25 percent of the world’s cultivated land. In response to the claim that tobacco growing is bad for growers’ health, it points out that the only health risk unique to tobacco crops is green tobacco sickness—a condition that is easily avoided with proper attire and training.

    The ITGA also addresses criticisms about farmer debt and child labor on its website.

  • Innovator to Harness AI for Tobacco

    Innovator to Harness AI for Tobacco

    Ryan Selby | Photo: Poda Holdings

    Generative AI Solutions Corp. intends to build a large language model (LLM) dedicated to harnessing the power of artificial intelligence for the tobacco industry. For this purpose, it has incorporated a new subsidiary called GenAI Tobacco. The company intends to launch the LLM tobacco product under the brand name Tobacco Titan.

    Tobacco Titan aims to provide AI-powered information about products, marketing and regulations, along with health and safety insights. The product could also make customized recommendations, such as new flavors, brands or smoking accessories that align with the adult user’s tastes and preferences.

    “I have seen the need for innovation and data collection firsthand in the tobacco industry,” said GenAI Chairman and CEO Ryan Selby, who previously was co-founder and CEO of Poda Holdings, in a statement.

    “Through my various contacts at some of the largest tobacco companies in the world, along with various other industry leaders, I believe we can build Tobacco Titan into an extremely valuable global enterprise system, providing utility to individuals and businesses alike.

    “Our goal is to partner with certain companies in the tobacco industry that have access to various proprietary datasets which will give Tobacco Titan a competitive advantage based on the uniqueness of the data that is not generally available on the internet. We plan on working with our partners Metachain Technologies. to facilitate the development of Tobacco Titan and will finalize our arrangement with them in the coming weeks.”

  • Latvian Vapers Petition to Retain Flavors

    Latvian Vapers Petition to Retain Flavors

    Photo: niyazz

    More than 10,000 citizens have signed a petition to keep e-cigarette flavors legal in Latvia, reports the Baltic News Network. Because the initiative has received the legally required number of signatures, it is entitled to a review by Latvia’s parliament, the Saeima.

    Rather than banning flavors, the petition urges Latvia’s government to crack down on illegal vape sales and educate society about healthy choices.

    According to the Tobacco-Free Products Association, the vaping industry targets smokers aiming to quit cigarettes, which are believed to be far more harmful than e-cigarettes.

    According to Toms Lusis, the author of the initiative, Latvian legislators’ attitudes toward vapor products are based on outdated beliefs and studies.

    “The latest scientific data shows that e-cigarettes are up to 95 percent less dangerous for human health than regular cigarettes,” he said. “The use of e-cigarettes [is] supported as a way out of sorts for residents to stop using tobacco products as well as radically combat the widely spread smoking-related diseases like lung cancer.”

    Lusis cautioned that by denying adults the freedom of choice when it comes to e-cigarette flavors, the state could also lose considerable revenue from excise tax on flavored e-cigarette liquids.

  • Tax Hike to Boost Tobacco Revenue

    Tax Hike to Boost Tobacco Revenue

    Photo: sezerozger

    The government of Pakistan will collect PKR200 billion ($698.5 million) in tobacco taxes this year, up from PKR148 in the previous fiscal year, reports Dawn, citing a study by The Capital Calling.

    In February, the government significantly increased the federal excise duties. According to The Capital Calling study, the higher prices forced one in every 94 smokers in Pakistan to quit.

    The tobacco industry says the higher taxes have prompted many smokers to buy their cigarettes on the black market. According to industry representatives, volumes of duty-not-paid cigarettes and smuggled cigarettes have shot up 32.5 percent and 67 percent, respectively, since January. This has bumped the illicit sector’s share to more than 42.5 percent of Pakistan’s total tobacco market.

    Critics say the industry is exaggerating the problem, with some surveys estimating the share of illicit sales at only 18 percent of the tobacco market.

    Pakistan Tobacco Co. has scaled back production in the wake of the tax hike, citing difficulties competing with the thriving illicit market. In a letter to the Federal Board of Revenue, the company stated its intention to reexport four cigarette making machines due to a decline in sales volume. The company has reportedly already shut down eight of 10 production lines at its Jhelum facility.

  • Misconceptions About E-cigs Persist: Study

    Misconceptions About E-cigs Persist: Study

    Photo: pavelkant

    About half of cigarette smokers and young adult nonsmokers think that nicotine-based electronic cigarettes have the same amount or even more harmful chemicals than regular tobacco-based cigarettes, according to a Rutgers study.

    Published in Addiction, the study measured perceived levels of harmful chemicals in e-cigarettes compared with cigarettes using national samples of more than 1,000 adults ages 18 and older who smoke cigarettes and 1,000-plus adults ages 18 to 29 who are nonsmokers. The study also measured associations with e-cigarette/cigarette relative harm perceptions, e-cigarette use and interest. About 20 percent of all participants believed e-cigarettes contain fewer harmful chemicals than cigarettes while about 30 percent responded that they did not know how the levels compared.

    “Our results were interesting to see given that previous review reports suggest e-cigarettes expose users to fewer types and lower levels of harmful and potentially harmful chemicals than cigarettes,” said Olivia Wackowski of Rutgers Center for Tobacco Studies, an associate professor at the Rutgers School of Public Health and lead researcher of the study, in a statement. “It was also interesting to find that only about half of adult smokers who thought e-cigarettes have fewer harmful chemicals also thought e-cigarettes are less harmful to health.”

    E-cigarette harm perception relative to typical cigarettes is a common question included on major national health and tobacco surveys in the United States. However, surveys of e-cigarettes typically haven’t included a question about the perceived exposure to or level of harmful chemicals in e-cigarettes relative to cigarettes.

    According to the study researchers, measuring perceptions of e-cigarette and cigarette chemical exposure is important because e-cigarette communications often directly refer to chemicals in some way, which may impact perceptions about chemicals and harms from using e-cigarettes compared to cigarettes.

  • Governments Urged to Hasten End of Smoking

    Governments Urged to Hasten End of Smoking

    Jacek Olczak | Photo: PMI

    Current tobacco control policies are not working fast enough to reduce the prevalence of smoking and may be prolonging cigarette use, according to Philip Morris International CEO Jacek Olczak.

    Speaking on May 23 at the UnHerd Club in London, Olczak said that cigarettes belong in museums and called on governments globally to accelerate the end of cigarettes, according to a company press release.

    Drawing upon a new hypothetical model based on data from the World Health Organization and other parties, Olczak explained that even if smoke-free products were assumed to be only 80 percent less risky than cigarettes, if people who currently smoke were to switch to them completely, then over their lifetime there’s a potential for a 10-fold reduction in smoking-attributable deaths compared with historical tobacco control measures alone.

    He highlighted the paradox that smoke-free products are banned in some countries while cigarettes—despite their far greater risk of harm—can still be sold. While acknowledging that the model he used has limitations and is built on assumptions, Olczak noted that the public health cost of ignoring the potential of smoke-free products could be immense.

    In 2016, PMI committed to moving away from cigarettes. As of March 31, 2023, the company had invested more than $10.5 billion since 2008 in developing and commercializing smoke-free products, which today account for nearly 35 percent of the company’s total net revenues. The mission, Olczak explained, is to reduce smoking by replacing cigarettes with less harmful alternatives and ultimately to make cigarettes obsolete.

    However, he noted, PMI’s ability to progress on this mission is being frustrated by a combination of blind opposition from anti-tobacco organizations and governments’ overreliance on the so-called precautionary principle, which some interpret as “better not to do anything until we know everything.”

    Olczak called on governments worldwide to follow the examples of countries like Sweden, Japan and the U.K., and adopt policies that give adult smokers who don’t quit a wide choice of alternatives to continuing smoking so they can make better choices and cigarettes can become a historical artifact. He also challenged anti-tobacco organizations to update their thinking, stop blocking innovation, and work toward a common goal to achieve a smoke-free future, faster.

  • Malaysia Ready to Table Endgame Bill

    Malaysia Ready to Table Endgame Bill

    Photo: hakbak

    Malaysia’s Ministry of Health is ready to table the Control of Smoking Product for Public Health Bill, which includes the Generational Endgame (GEG) policy, reports the New Straits Times.

    If enacted, the legislation would prohibit anyone born in 2007 or later from buying and using cigarettes or vaping products in Malaysia. A provision to ban possession of those products has been dropped from the bill on the recommendation of the Parliamentary Special Select Committee.

    The bill also governs registration, advertising, promotion and sponsorship, packaging and sales of smoking products.

    “Any violation, including selling of cigarettes to children in the GEG group will be an offence when the bill is passed,” said the health minister’s special adviser, Helmy Haja Mydin.

    People in the targeted age group caught buying or using tobacco or vaper product risk fines of MYR500 and community service. The fines had been reduced from a previous proposal to avoid unduly burdening the GEG group.

    According to Mydin, the order is meant to educate and show that the policy is not purely punitive.

    After its enactment, the bill requires periodic reports to measure the legislation’s effectiveness in combating underage smoking.

  • France Bans Smoking in Forests

    France Bans Smoking in Forests

    Photo: Thicha

    French lawmakers have voted to ban smoking in forests during the fire season, reports AP.

    The National Assembly voted 197-0 in a first reading on May 17 of a proposed law to better prevent and tackle forest fires. The draft has already passed through the Senate.

    The smoking ban builds on an existing forest law that already bans the lighting of fires within 200 meters of wooded areas. It aims to reduce the risk of fires started by discarded cigarettes—a frequent cause of blazes, especially when woodlands are tinder-dry.

    Forest fires have long regularly afflicted France, one of the most wooded countries in Europe. But they generally used to start later in the year. Major wildfires in Europe are now starting earlier, becoming more frequent and harder to stop, and doing more damage. Scientists say they’ll likely get worse as climate change intensifies. The Mediterranean region is warming faster than the global average.

    The government says human activity is by far the most frequent trigger of forest fires in France, responsible for 90 percent of blazes.