Category: People

  • Rewarded with lower prices

    Rewarded with lower prices

    The Tobacco Association of Malawi (TAMA) has urged the Government to improve security at the country’s borders to help stop leaf tobacco smuggling, according to a Malawi24 story.

    Speaking at the 2019 TAMA annual meeting, the Association’s president, Kalima Banda, said curbing tobacco smuggling would ensure that Malawian tobacco growers were rewarded for their hard work.

    Banda said that producing tobacco involved a lot of hard work and resources, and that growers needed to be rewarded.

    But growers had to tend their tobacco with care to attract better prices, once this year’s marketing season started.

    Banda advised tobacco growers not to sell their crop to middlemen, saying they should wait for the opening of the auction floors, where they could sell their crop at better prices.

    It will be interesting to see whether the tobacco growers heed Banda’s warnings.

    Last month, the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World said that a 2016 study found that only 25 percent of Malawian tobacco farmers were content with the prices they received in 2014, and that about 41 percent of all tobacco farmers had considered switching to alternative crops or livelihoods.

    About 45 percent of all tobacco farmers in Malawi were said by the Foundation to be contract farmers, but no statistically significant differences between independent and contract farmers were found in price satisfaction and desire to switch.

    Crucially, the Foundation, which was focusing initially on Malawi as part of its Agricultural Transformation Initiative, said farm-gate prices of tobacco in Malawi had fallen by 54 percent between 2012 and 2016.

  • Vaping ban in public places

    Vaping ban in public places

    The Chinese city of Shenzhen is to strengthen its regulations on tobacco smoking in public places, according to a story in The China Daily citing a Nanfang Daily report.

    The change in direction has been made necessary because the city authorities have reportedly run into problems in implementing their original regulations.

    The problems apparently arose in the form of difficulties with law enforcement and evidence collection, complex punishment procedures and excessive fines.

    Since the implementation of tobacco smoking regulations in Shenzhen on March 1, 2014, the authorities have raked in 3.745 million yuan in fines, comprising 3.325 million yuan in fines on smokers and 420,000 yuan in fines on venues.

    Deputies of the Shenzhen People’s Congress on January 18 proposed that Shenzhen should revise its policy on tobacco smoking in public places to make the regulations more practical.

    The revised draft of the Regulation on Smoking Control expands the definition of smoking to include the use of electronic cigarettes and other lit tobacco products.

    It expands the scope of smoke-free areas, which now include outdoor queuing areas for public transport, such as buses, coaches, taxis, subways, ships and civil aircraft. Smoking is prohibited also within five meters of subway entrances and exits.

    And it stipulates that no tobacco products are to be sold within 100 meters of kindergartens, primary and secondary schools, and children’s activity centers.

  • A nice little earner

    A nice little earner

    Tobacco users in Belgium contributed €2.373 billion in excise tax to the state’s treasury last year, according to a story by Jason Bennett for the Brussels Times citing a Sudpresse newspapers report.

    Tobacco excise in 2018 was said to have been increased by €123.8 million on that of 2017, ‘after stagnating for four years’.

    Border sales are thought to have played a role in the increase, partly because the price of a pack of cigarettes was increased by €1 in France in March 2018.

    Tobacco excise in Belgium in 2018 accounted for about 27 percent of the treasury’s total excise income, €8.83 billion.

  • Fake news from Kenya

    Fake news from Kenya

    About 700 million counterfeit cigarettes were traded in Kenya last year, according to a story in The Star citing market research by British American Tobacco.

    The company was quoted as saying that the illegal trade in Kenya accounted for 14.1 percent of the cigarette market.

    Financial director Sidney Wafula said the trade ‘denies Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Sh2.5 billion annually in tax revenue while the industry loses Sh900 million’.

    Meanwhile, MD Beverly Spencer that BAT’s independent third-party research showed that counterfeit cigarettes were either smuggled into the country, having been destined for a lower tax market that was never reached, or they were produced locally with forged tax stamps.

    Spencer said KRA and other relevant bodies needed to find the point of sale of the fake products because it was difficult for consumers to tell the difference between genuine and fake products.

  • Vaporous draft law

    Vaporous draft law

    The Government of Hong Kong seems to be intent on bringing in a vaping law that does not ally with its own policy on vaping.

    According to a story in The Hong Kong Free Press, a proposed draft law states that anyone who imports, manufactures, sells, distributes, possesses [basically, commercial quantities] or promotes alternative smoking products, including e-cigarettes, heat-not-burn products and herbal cigarettes, will be subject to a maximum HK$50,000 fine and six months behind bars.

    But the territory’s deputy secretary for food and health Amy Yuen said at a press conference on Wednesday that the draft law did not intend to criminalize those who used alternative smoking products. “It may not be feasible if we ban the use of these products,”. “We also don’t want to disturb people too much.”

    It was not clear from the story how it could be that making vaping devices unavailable on the open market would not amount to disturbing users ‘too much’.

    Nevertheless, it is apparent that the authorities accept that people will continue to use these products, presumably by buying them on the black market, because the draft law makes provision for punishing people for using alternative smoking products in non-smoking areas: either with a fixed penalty of HK$1,500 or a fine of HK$5,000 upon conviction.

    The thinking behind the policy seems deeply flawed. “For users of these new products, the answer is not to go back to conventional smoking products,” Yuen was quoted as saying. “This is not what we are trying to do. We want them to quit altogether.”

    Yuen apparently gave no suggestion as to how a former smoker, still addicted to nicotine and deprived of her vaping device, could prevent herself from returning to smoking.

    On the question of travellers, Yuen said the government was inclined to adopt a measure applied in Singapore whereby, for a limited time, tourists could surrender their alternative smoking products at the airport. Presumably, thereafter they will be banged up for six months.

    The first and second readings of the draft law are due next Wednesday.

    The government said it hoped the law would be effective six months after it is passed by the legislature.

  • Consumption down

    Consumption down

    Tobacco consumption in Bangladesh decreased by 18.5 percent during the eight years till the end of 2017, but the rate of decline is not enough to meet the country’s goal of being smoke free by 2040, according to a story in The Daily Star quoting anti-tobacco activists.

    Government initiatives, such as the imposition of graphic health warnings on tobacco packages, had caused the decline, said Hasan Shahriar, the co-ordinator of Progga, during a seminar in Dhaka yesterday.

    Progotir Jonno Gyan (PROGGA) and the Anti-Tobacco Media Alliance (ATMA) organized the seminar at the Jatiya Press Club to discuss the tobacco-consumption data revealed by the Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS) last year.

    The incidence of tobacco consumption among people more than 15 years of age was said to have fallen from 43.3 percent in 2009 to 35.3 percent in 2017.

    Exposure to second-hand smoke in the home had declined from 54.9 percent in 2009 to 39.0 percent in 2017.

    And exposure had declined also in public places: from 79.7 percent to 49.7 percent in restaurants; from 62.2 percent to 42.7 percent in indoor areas of the work place; from 53.6 percent to 44.0 percent on public transport, and from 23.8 percent to 12.7 percent in health care facilities.

  • Dynamic change foretold

    Dynamic change foretold

    Gemma Webb, British American Tobacco UK’s GM, said yesterday that the tobacco industry was entering the most dynamic period of change it had ever encountered.

    “We are experiencing an extraordinary, once-in-a-generation coming-together of societal change, public health awareness and, crucially, access to technological innovation in the nicotine category,” she said.

    “This convergence of factors has created a unique opportunity for the industry and our business: the opportunity to make a substantial leap forward in our ambition to provide our consumers with a choice of potentially reduced risk tobacco and nicotine products.”

    Webb was speaking at a BAT launch party for the newest iterations of its Vype electronic cigarettes, Vype iSwitch and iSwitch Maxx.

    The party, which was held against the background of the London skyline as seen from the top of the ‘Gherkin’ building, attracted about 60 people from the vaping and creative industries, along with journalists and influencers.

    During the formal part of the evening, guests were addressed by Webb and Marina Trani, new categories group R&D director.

    Guests were taken through the innovative devices and technologies that BAT had introduced since 2014: innovative devices such as the ePen3 and new e-liquid technologies that brought nicotine salts into the equation.

    The iSwitch devices, meanwhile, include BAT’s Puretech blade, which replaces the coil and wick system. Trani said the Puretech system incorporated an ultra-slim, stainless steel blade that heated the e-liquid to create vapor. The blade, which was about the thickness of a human hair, had a surface area 10 times larger than a traditional coil and wick heating system. It provided a much more precise and measured way to heat the e-liquid, increasing consumer taste satisfaction by ensuring a smoother, richer and more consistent vape, with no off-notes.

    The Maxx version was said to be BAT’s most interactive and connected vapor device. Bluetooth enabled, it connects with the MyVype app through which consumers can tailor their device’s power setting; remotely lock the device to ensure that nobody else can use it; monitor puff count, battery level and device performance to track their usage; and access tips and news.

    Brief mention was made at Tuesday night’s event of the Monday announcement by BAT that it had entered into a new global partnership with McLaren that was ‘rooted in advanced technology and innovation’.

    ‘The multi-year partnership is focused on accelerating its transforming tobacco agenda, at the heart of which is its commitment to providing a portfolio of potentially reduced-risk products (PRRPs), which can deliver a “better tomorrow” for its consumers,’ BAT said in a press note.

    ‘As part of the agreement, BAT will work closely with McLaren Applied Technologies, collaborating and sharing technology expertise; including batteries, advanced materials and design. The two companies will share best practice, processes, innovation, know-how and mutual experience.’

  • General decision time

    General decision time

    Some members of a Tobacco Product Scientific Advisory Committee have argued that if a product such as snus does not qualify for the US Food and Drug Administration’s modified risk tobacco product (MRTP) status, the designation might as well not exist, according to a MedPage Today story relayed by the TMA.

    “I think the health [benefits] are really clear compared to smoking – more so than for any other smokeless tobacco product,” committee member Kenneth E. Warner, PhD, of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, was quoted as saying. “My sense is that if this is not approved, it might be the death knell for the [MRTP] process because we would be basically saying you can’t get anything through this process.”

    The committee was considering an MRPT application by Swedish Match North America in respect of its General snus brand. The company has been trying for years to have a health warning changed in respect of its General snus brand, but the issue has been kicked down the road.

    Most people believe that the consumption of snus is hugely less risky than is smoking and that health warnings should reflect this.

    However, some members of the Committee reportedly expressed concerns that increased popularity of General snus could lead to increased uptake among young people.

    In fact, according to the findings of an FDA-requested Swedish Match study, Swedish Match snus product users in the US are mostly male, have a median age of 35, are fairly well educated, are slightly more affluent than general smokeless tobacco users, and are largely Caucasian.

    The Committee met in Washington DC on February 6 to review the scientific evidence, health risk, claim development, testing and population impact revealed in a 10,000-person Consumer Research study requested by the FDA of Swedish Match.

    It considered the statement that consumers in the 10,000-person study found to be the most understandable the warning: ‘Using General Snus instead of cigarettes puts you at a lower risk of mouth cancer, heart disease, lung cancer, stroke, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis’.

    One Committee member was quoted as saying: “Swedish Match is a company that has never marketed to youth, it has a history I trust. Semantic issues can be fixed, but the public needs to be informed about tobacco harm reduction products”.

    And, in summarizing the proceedings, the chairman of the panel, Dr. Robin Mermelstein of the University of Illinois at Chicago, said she believed there had been a fair amount of consensus against a background of a range of opinions. There had been consensus around the importance of providing accurate information about relative harms.

    The goal of getting people who were unable to quit smoking off combustibles and on to less harmful products was certainly a laudatory one, Mermelstein said. She seemed to indicate, too, that there was a fair amount of consensus around the fact that whatever could be done to promote such switching was worthwhile, and that the Swedish Match approach was a potential path to such switching.

    The FDA did not ask the Committee for a vote because, according to its spokesperson: “We felt what would be most useful [to us] was to have the qualitative discussion to make sure we hear the points that are concerning [the panel]”.

    After listening to the proceedings, tobacco harm reduction expert David Sweanor, of the University of Ottawa’s Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics said the data on snus being dramatically less hazardous than smoking was overwhelming; as was the data on smokers not knowing this fact.

    “In many ways, the FDA proceedings are less a test for Swedish Match than of the FDA itself,” he said. “After a decade of the tobacco law, and literally millions of American deaths from cigarettes, can the agency simply allow people to be told the truth? This should be no more complicated than allowing the public to know that three-point seatbelts – another Swedish innovation – reduce the risks of driving.”

  • Singular offence

    Singular offence

    A Kenyan man has been told he must pay a Sh15,000 fine or serve five months in prison for selling single cigarettes, according to a story in The Nairobi News.

    The punishment was handed down by a Nyeri Court on Tuesday.

    The man, Simon Gichuki Maina, appeared before resident magistrate Ruth Kefa where he pleaded guilty to selling single cigarettes.

    The law states that cigarettes may be sold only in packs.

    The Court heard that Maina was arrested by Nyeri police at the Kasuku bar on February 11.

    Maina asked the court for leniency on the grounds that he did not know that selling single cigarettes was a crime.

  • Standard debate

    Standard debate

    The Malaysian Health Ministry is considering introducing standard packaging for cigarettes, according to a story by Robin Augustin for Free Malaysia Today.

    Deputy Health Minister Dr. Lee Boon Chye was said to have told Today that standardized tobacco packaging was part of the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which Malaysia had become a party to in 2005.

    “This has been done in countries like Australia, and the results can be seen,” he said.

    Lee acknowledged that there would be opposition to the move from industry players and traders.

    “They will cite reasons like the cost of the exercise and how it will affect their business or the intellectual property rights of tobacco companies,” he said.

    “We are considering it. There is no timeline set. We have to study the matter and hold talks with stakeholders.”

    The Galen Center for Health and Social Policy was said to have told Today it would support a move to introduce standardized tobacco packaging but noted several matters that should be considered firstly.

    The think tank’s CEO Azrul Mohd Khalib said these matters included the need for new and specific legislation to ensure the parameters of standardized tobacco packaging were clear on intellectual property rights.

    “There are legitimate concerns from businesses regarding how their trademarks would be affected by this move,” he said.

    “Their worries and issues need to be fairly heard and addressed.”

    Azrul warned that the imposition of standardized tobacco packaging could result in smokers choosing cheaper tobacco products, which could lead to an increase in smoking rates.

    “It could increase the preference for illicit tobacco products which would likely be the cheapest on the shelf,” he said, adding that the government must be prepared to implement more enforcement regarding the illicit cigarette market.