Category: Featured

  • Israel: Knesset Finalizes Vapor Tax

    Israel: Knesset Finalizes Vapor Tax

    Photo: Spiroview Inc.

    The finance committee of Israel’s Knesset has approved a slightly modified version of the tax on vaping hardware and e-liquid that was imposed last November, reports Vaping360.

    Although the committee reportedly eliminated a separate tax on disposable products, Israel will still have the highest vape tax in the world. Effective immediately, all vaping products will be subject to a tax equaling 270 percent of the wholesale cost, plus NIS15.6 ($4.94) per milliliter of e-liquid.

    Both the finance and health ministries aimed to tax vaping products at the same rate as cigarettes. Maintaining that vaping is just as dangerous as smoking, the health ministry initially sought an even higher tax. According to Israel Hayom, Finance Committee Chairman Alex Kushnir “reduced the conversion formula by 30 percent compared to what the Ministry of Health wanted.”

  • Halo Exempted From Vape Mail Ban

    Halo Exempted From Vape Mail Ban

    Photo: will milne

    The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has granted Pure Labs permission to ship its Halo brand of vaping products to compliant businesses through the brand’s Master Distributors, Syndicate Global Distribution and Halo Wholesale Direct.

    The approval constitutes a regulatory exception to the mailing restrictions described in the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking (PACT) Act.

    The original PACT Act was amended by Congress on Dec. 27, 2020, to incorporate e-cigarettes and vaping products.

    “This is a huge win for Halo and for all of our retail partners,” said Kevin Dietz, director of Halo brand sales, in a statement. “Halo’s tobacco and menthol vape products are in demand by adult consumers throughout the country, and we are excited to have USPS solidify the supply chain. Halo has been here from the start and has numerous ENDS products in the final stage required for FDA authorization, furthering Halo’s commitment to remain America’s No. 1 tobacco-flavored e-liquid brand.”

    In December, Turning Point Brands received a USPS exemption to ship vapor products to age-restricted vape shops across the United States through VaporBeast and other websites.

  • Publishing Ban for Industry-Owned Firms

    Publishing Ban for Industry-Owned Firms

    Photo: PixieMe

    A group of international respiratory societies has banned researchers associated with tobacco companies from publishing papers in their journals following Philip Morris International’s acquisition of the U.K.-based pharmaceutical firm Vectura, reports Nature. The measure comes on top of the groups’ decade-long publishing ban on researchers directly funded by tobacco companies.

    In a joint statement, the groups describe PMI’s purchase of Vectura as “highly unethical and inappropriate.”

    Scientists at Vectura produce drugs that treat asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, including some smoking-related respiratory illnesses. “That is the ultimate conflict of interest,” said Gregory Downey, a pulmonologist at the University of Colorado Denver and president-elect of the American Thoracic Society, which co-signed the statement.

    “The issue is that ‘Big Tobacco’ could use, and will use, this technology not only to potentially enhance delivery of tobacco-containing substances and nicotine devices but to addict more people.”

    Moira Gilchrist, vice president of strategic and scientific communications at PMI in Lausanne, Switzerland, says the idea that the company would use Vectura’s technology in this way is “false and without basis.”

    “We openly welcome and encourage legitimate critique and debate about our business transformation, but when this morphs into actively ostracizing scientists and attempting to prevent the prescribing of proven medicines for patients, we should pause and think of the implications,” Gilchrist adds.

    Signatories of the statement include The European Respiratory Society, International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases, Asian Pacific Society of Respirology, Asociacion Latino Americana De Torax, and the Global Initiative for Asthma.

  • Korea: E-Cigs Gain as Combustibles Stagnate

    Korea: E-Cigs Gain as Combustibles Stagnate

    Photo: Dzmitry

    Sales of cigarettes in South Korea were flat from 2020 to 2021 but demand for electronic cigarettes rose amid the protracted pandemic, reports the Yonhap News Agency, citing data from the finance ministry.

    South Korean smokers purchased 3.59 billion 20-cigarette packs in 2021, similar to the number logged the previous year, according to the Ministry of Economy and Finance.

    Sales of traditional cigarettes fell 2 percent on-year to 3.15 billion packs last year while those of heat-not-burn tobacco products rose 17.1 percent to 440 million packs.

    Compared with 2014, however, cigarette sales declined 17.7 percent last year—a development the government attributed to rising prices and anti-smoking campaigns.

    In January 2015, South Korea increased cigarette prices by 80 percent to KRW4,500 ($3.72). The next year, the government required tobacco companies to print graphic images depicting the harmful effects of smoking on the upper part of cigarette packs.

    As of 2020, the smoking rate among Korean men aged 19 or older dropped to a record low of 34 percent, down 1.7 percentage points from a year earlier, according to the health ministry.

  • FDA Menthol Cigs and Flavored Cigars Plans on Track

    FDA Menthol Cigs and Flavored Cigars Plans on Track

    Photo: Yulia Usikava

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is on track to propose rules prohibiting menthol as a characterizing flavor in cigarettes and prohibiting all characterizing flavors (including menthol) in cigars by spring.

    The FDA’s actions “are an important opportunity to achieve significant, meaningful public health gains and advance health equity,” said FDA Center for Tobacco Products Director Mitch Zeller in a statement. “For far too long, specific populations have been targeted and disproportionately impacted by tobacco use, especially when it comes to characterizing flavors that entice them to start and keep smoking.”

    In April 2021, the FDA announced its commitment to advancing these two tobacco product standards. Then in November, attorneys for the FDA appeared in court as anti-tobacco groups accused the agency of failing to implement a ban on menthol cigarettes.

    The National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS) cautioned that banning menthol in cigarettes and all characterizing flavors in cigars would boost black market sales.

    “Menthol makes up more than 37 percent of the tobacco market,” Lyle Beckwith, NACS senior vice president of government relations, said in an article published on the association’s website. “That demand will not go away due to a ban. NACS is on record opposing menthol bans as we believe illicit vendors will quickly source and begin selling foreign and counterfeit menthol cigarettes. Illicit vendors do not verify age, do not collect and remit taxes, and they sell other illegal products beyond just menthol cigarettes.”

    In the convenience retailing channel, cigarettes contributed 27.79 percent of in-store sales in 2020, according to the NACS State of the Industry Report of 2020 Data. Other tobacco products, a category which includes cigars, accounted for 6.9 percent of in-store sales in 2020.

    After reviewing and considering comments to its proposed rules, the FDA could then proceed to issue final product standards, which would become enforceable once in effect.

  • Philippine Vaping Bill Heads to President’s Desk

    Philippine Vaping Bill Heads to President’s Desk

    Photo: Oleksii

    The Philippine House of Representatives and Senate have ratified a vaping bill that critics describe as too industry-friendly. The legislation will now be forwarded to President Rodrigo Duterte for his signature.

    Among other provisions, the bill transfers regulatory powers from the Food and Drug Administration to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and lowers the legal purchase and consumption age for vapor products from 21 to 18. The DTI is also in charge of setting technical standards for the safety, consistency and quality of these smoking alternatives.

    Philippine College of Physicians (COP) President Maricar Blanco-Limpin said he was particularly concerned about the lower vaping age. “We have been telling all the legislators that making these more available at a younger age is making these e-cigarettes and heated-tobacco products more available to all, including the nonsmokers,” she told CNN Philippines.

    Blanco-Limpin said vape products could lead to health concerns and the “mandate to protect the health of the country falls under the FDA, not the DTI.”

    If the president signs the measure, Blanco-Limpin said the COP would consider all actions, including bringing the issue to the Supreme Court.

  • Cote d’Ivoire Mandates Plain Tobacco Packs

    Cote d’Ivoire Mandates Plain Tobacco Packs

    Photo: alexlmx

    Cote d’Ivoire has become the first country in Africa to require plain packaging on tobacco products, according to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK).

    Pioneered in Australia, plain packaging legislation requires that cigarettes be sold in generic, uniform packaging free of colorful branding or designs. When implemented in concert with smoke-free public places, restrictions on tobacco advertising, increased tobacco taxes and warning labels on tobacco products, plain packaging is a powerful public health tool, according to anti-smoking activists.

    To reduce the appeal of tobacco products, more than 20 countries have adopted plain packaging as part of a suite of tobacco control measures aimed at driving down smoking rates and preventing young people from starting to smoke.

    In 2015, Bloomberg Philanthropies and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced the creation of the Anti-Tobacco Trade Litigation Fund, which provides on-request support to low-income and middle-income countries that have been sued by tobacco companies opposed to plain packaging laws.

    “The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids congratulates Cote d’Ivoire on bringing plain packaging to Africa where strong action is needed to prevent a tobacco epidemic—and stands ready to support this life-saving public health measure,” wrote Bintou Camara Biyeki, director of Africa programs at the CTFK.

  • Illegal Cigarette Factory Dismantled in Slovenia

    Illegal Cigarette Factory Dismantled in Slovenia

    Photo: Europol

    French and Slovenian authorities have dismantled a cigarette factory in Slovenia that was supplying millions of counterfeit cigarettes to France, according to Europol.

    Initiated in October 2020, the investigation focused on an organized crime group involved in the illicit production and distribution of cigarettes. After two successful actions in France in April and May 2021 targeting the criminals involved in the distribution of these counterfeit cigarettes, the Slovenian authorities started a mirror investigation aimed at arresting the suspects responsible for the production of these illegal products.

    On Jan. 25, more than 100 officers from the Slovenian National Police Force and Financial Administration simultaneously raided 11 sites, including industrial premises and private residences. They were assisted in the field by officers from the French Gendarmerie as well as French magistrates from the Bordeaux Interregional Specialized Court and Europol officers. 

    This action uncovered several production sites established in warehouses located in remote areas of Slovenia. In total, more than 26 tons of tobacco were seized in Slovenia as well as 29 million filters, several cigarette-making machines and 10 tons of printed papers for packaging. The seized equipment was capable of producing cigarettes with a value of €13 million on the French market.

    Leaders of the criminal network were arrested in Croatia and Slovenia. They will be handed over to the judicial authorities in Bordeaux.

    In November 2021, the Slovenian Financial Administration seized an additional 12 tons of cut tobacco.

  • FDA Looking for New CTP Director

    FDA Looking for New CTP Director

    Photo: BreizhAtao

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is now accepting applications for the position of director of the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP). The current director, Mitch Zeller, plans to retire in April.

    The CTP director is responsible for planning, managing, directing and coordinating major tobacco program objectives to implement the Tobacco Control Act and related regulations.

    This senior-level FDA position advises the FDA commissioner, senior FDA officials and others on all matters involving tobacco product regulation that have an impact on policy development and execution and long-range program goals. The director develops and executes the strategies for compliance outreach, enforcement, regulations and guidance formulation, science-based application review and other product regulation activities.

    The individual selected for this position will represent the agency and establish/maintain relationships in meetings and conferences with top level FDA and Health and Human Services officials, national industry representatives, members of Congress, and counterparts from federal, state, local and foreign governments.

    Candidates must complete their applications by 11:59 p.m. on Feb. 25, 2022.

  • New Technology to Help Reduce Dependency

    New Technology to Help Reduce Dependency

    Photo: pavelkant

    VapeAway has developed a technology designed to help reduce vaping dependency. According to the company, the VapeAway filter attaches to an existing e-cigarette pod, automatically working to remove toxins found in e-cigarettes with minimal impact on the quality of the vaping experience.

    The patented VapeAway filter is said to stop nicotine before it enters the body by gradually reducing nicotine intake in levels, beginning at 25 percent and increasing to a 75 percent reduction over the course of nine weeks, thus reprogramming the brain to decrease cravings and reduce dependency.

    “Every e-cigarette, regardless of its type, flavor or contents, contains dangerous chemical toxins,” says Ike Sutton, the founder of VapeAway. “VapeAway offers the first patented filter that removes those toxins. Until now, those who were dependent on nicotine have been directed to nicotine patches or gum as their recovery solution, both of which use nicotine to satisfy cravings and with that comes a laundry list of warnings and side effects.

    “VapeAway’s patented technology does the opposite and does not administer a drug to help people quit a drug. Our filters stop the nicotine directly at the source and reduce the intake of harmful chemicals while users continue to vape, all the while ultimately helping people quit in the long term if they choose to do so.”

    VapeAway says its Vapor Freeze 2.0 technology consists of a proprietary blend of military grade, nontoxic fibers that freeze potentially harmful toxic chemicals on contact, protecting vapers and others around them from unwanted chemicals and toxins entering their lungs.

    The technology has been tested to ensure it meets VapeAway’s stated use cases and it effectively and consistently performs to achieve the stated impact for its users. Preliminary tests were conducted by Enthalpy Laboratories.

    According to SGS North America, the VapeAway filter is 100 percent nontoxic.