Category: Sustainability

  • Recognizing climate credentials

    Recognizing climate credentials

    Philip Morris International (PMI), British American Tobacco (BAT), Japan Tobacco (JT) and Imperial Brands have been recognized for their efforts to reduce their environmental footprints.

    All companies made the 2019 A-list of CDP, a global environmental impact nonprofit organization.

    “For many years, PMI has been taking actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in our operations and across our value chain, where 85 percent of the emissions occur,” said Huub Savelkouls, PMI’s chief sustainability officer. “Being placed on CDP’s A-List for climate change validates the progress we are making in our commitment to sustainability and environmental transparency.”

    “We are delighted that our efforts have resulted [in] inclusion in the CDP A-list and see it as great recognition of our work to secure a better tomorrow for all our stakeholders,” said Simon Cleverly, group head of corporate affairs at BAT.

    “This clearly reflects our continued efforts to reduce our environmental footprint and our transparency in disclosing information,” said Kazuhito Yamashita, senior vice president and chief sustainability officer of compliance and general affairs for JT.

    “We’ve made good progress in reducing our environmental impact over the last decade, and in 2019 developed new long-term environmental targets for the next 10-30 years, setting science-based carbon targets for both our direct operations and our supply chain,” said Surinder Sond, group head of sustainability at Imperial Brands.

    “We’re committed to minimizing our environmental impacts and we’re delighted that our hard work and progress has been recognized by the CDP.”

    CDP’s annual environmental disclosure and scoring process is widely recognized as the gold standard of corporate environmental transparency. It uses a detailed and independent methodology to assess the companies that submit data, allocating a score from A to D based on the comprehensiveness of the disclosure, awareness and management of environmental risks and demonstration of best practices associated with environmental leadership.

    Those that don’t disclose or those that provide insufficient information receive an F.

  • PMI recognized

    PMI recognized

    Philip Morris International (PMI) is being recognized as one of 50 global sustainability leaders from the international business community in a documentary project called 50 Sustainability and Climate Leaders.

    PMI’s inclusion in the film is recognition of how the company is using sustainability to transform the business.

    The 50 Sustainability and Climate Leaders project demonstrates the private sector’s leadership capability and will to take action in the fight against climate change in six subject areas: energy transition, climate finance and carbon pricing, industry transition, nature-based solutions, cities and local action, and resilience.

  • Malawi Leaf Imports Halted

    Malawi Leaf Imports Halted

    The U.S. government has suspended all imports of tobacco from Malawi over child labor allegations, reports The Guardian.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection on Friday issued a “withhold release” order on tobacco from Malawi, meaning shipments arriving in the United States will be
    detained at the port of entry. Importers will have to prove the tobacco is not produced with labor prohibited under U.S. law to have the shipments released.

    The ban follows the news that human rights lawyers are to bring a case against British American Tobacco (BAT) in the high court in London over child labor in Malawi’s tobacco fields.U.K. law firm Leigh Day alleges that BAT is responsible for the low price paid for the leaf in Malawi, which keeps tenant farmers in such poverty that they have no choice but to make their children work in the fields.

    BAT says its core policies “specifically state that we do not condone forced, bonded or involuntary labor and that we do not condone or employ child labor,
    and [we] seek to ensure that the welfare, health and safety of children are paramount at all times.”

  • Seeking Substitutes

    Seeking Substitutes

    Ethical and scientific considerations are driving a move away from animal testing.

    By George Gay

    When I wrote asking for contributions to this story about replacing nonhuman animals in laboratory respiratory testing, one respondent replied that, unfortunately, this was outside his area of expertise, though not outside his area of interest. He went on to suggest that we replace the nonhuman animals with politicians before adding, in the words of the very wise W.S. Gilbert, “they’ll none of ’em be missed, they’ll none of ’em be missed.”

    It will come as no surprise that the person in question is based in the U.K. and that his comment can be seen as trying to lighten the pain caused by that country’s three years of political shenanigans over Brexit, though, as Louis MacNeice speculated about another matter, it is a moot point whether something so corrupted can be cured by laughter. But the comment was useful because it brought to mind the term “political animal” and reminded me that we are all animals, or, as William McIlvanney once said, “We are part animal. Humanity is an aspiration, not a fact of everyday life.”

    Regrettably, it would seem, this aspiration can hardly be said to have blossomed, at least within the tobacco and nicotine spheres, even though the weather is set fair, or perhaps it would be fairer to say that it has not been allowed to blossom. Amy Clippinger, president of the PETA International Science Consortium, told me during an email exchange in August that testing tobacco products on animals was banned in Belgium, Estonia, Germany, Slovakia and the U.K. on the grounds—unarguable in my view—that it was unethical to subject animals to testing products that are inherently unsafe for humans.

    This is all well and good, but it also suggests that something like 190 countries don’t ban such practices when, as Clippinger said, “We know that it is immediately achievable for all regulatory agencies to ban tests on animals for smoke and e-vapors—and all countries should follow suit.”

    This story arose out of an August press note from PETA that described how the Science Consortium, which works to accelerate the development, validation and global implementation of animal-free testing, had, together with Altria, British American Tobacco, Imperial Brands and Philip Morris International, donated equipment that could help to replace the use of animals in respiratory testing with more human-relevant, non-animal test methods.

    “The equipment—worth $110,000 and manufactured by Germany-based Vitrocell Systems—was donated to the Institute for In Vitro Sciences (IIVS), a nonprofit laboratory in Gaithersburg [Maryland, USA,] that conducts animal-free testing,” the press note said. “It will be used in the IIVS in vitro respiratory toxicology laboratory, which helps companies assess the effects of tobacco, nicotine and other aerosols on the human respiratory tract. Results from these tests will also help to show regulatory agencies, such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, that non-animal methods are accurate and effective and can be used instead of tests on animals.”

    That regulatory bodies still need convincing seems odd given that this is the 21st century and given what Clippinger had to say: “It often takes time to make changes to existing regulations but there is overwhelming scientific evidence that supports the use of animal-free testing approaches.”

    A different animal

    “We know that animal tests aren’t good predictors of human results—for example, negative results in animal studies were used for years to suggest that cigarettes don’t cause cancer,” she said in what appeared to me to be an incontrovertible repudiation of the value of animal testing—at the very least in this area. “It is well-established that differences in anatomy and physiology between the rodent and human respiratory tract limit the precision with which the rodent test predicts the human response.”

    For example, Clippinger said there were  differences in the ventilation rates and breathing modes between humans and animals. Humans breathed through their noses and mouths while rodents breathed only through their noses, a difference that affected particle and gas deposition.

    “Anatomically, there are differences in the airway architecture and branching pattern of the    respiratory tract,” Clippinger said. “The branching pattern in rodents is asymmetric or monopodial, which results in a relatively unimpeded airflow whereas the branching pattern in humans is bi- or tripodial, resulting in an airway pattern more susceptible to deposition at its bifurcation points.

    “There are also species differences in the cell types and their distribution within different regions of the respiratory tract, mucous composition and metabolic activity of critical enzymes.

    “All of these differences affect the deposition of an inhaled agent as well as its clearance or retention. Therefore, there has been significant interest in developing human cell-based approaches that can characterize the toxicity of inhaled substances while also providing a better understanding of how an inhaled material exerts its toxic effects in humans. We know there are more human-relevant and humane animal-free methods, and, sooner or later, regulations will catch up to the science.”

    Catching up

    Sooner, in my view, would be just fine—later, not so because from what is said above it would seem that all that is stopping the transition away from animal testing is inertia on the part of regulators, and there is no excuse for inertia in circumstances where countless nonhuman animals are being abused for no apparent reason. We know already that smoking is life-threatening, and common sense should tell us that vaping, though much less risky than smoking, is not going to be risk-free.

    The question arises, therefore, as to how long such a transition might take, and Clippinger indicated that the process would depend on whether the animal testing regimes in place were a matter of regulatory requirement or a nonrequired test. “In general, changing regulatory requirements for animal tests often involves a multi-pronged approach that includes having suitable alternative methods,” she said. “In the field of respiratory toxicology, for example, those methods include human cell lines and three-dimensional models. In fact, the Science Consortium funded the development of one such model and partnered with a biotech company to give away three-dimensional tissue models to researchers for free. Laboratories must also have the infrastructure needed to conduct these tests, which is why we donated the Vitrocell equipment. The remaining steps are for researchers and regulatory agencies to understand which non-animal assays are appropriate to use in specific testing situations and to gain confidence that the non-animal methods can protect human health as well as or better than the animal tests. The ongoing testing that we are funding and the educational opportunities that we provide will help overcome this hurdle.

    “It can take time for regulations to catch up with science—and often needs PETA to champion the transition. But we’re seeing signs of the replacement of animals in toxicity tests and know it is a matter of when, not if, these animal tests are eliminated altogether. The Dutch government plans to phase out many types of animal testing by 2025, and, in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency is making strides as well. Companies are publishing on their work to advance animal-free testing approaches and proactively submitting data from non-animal tests to the United States Center for Tobacco Products to register their products. Because animals are often poor predictors of the human response, there are scientific and ethical factors driving the transition to animal-free testing.”

    The donations of Vitrocell in vitro equipment came about because the Science Consortium wanted to be sure that companies interested in transitioning to in vitro inhalation testing had facilities they could go to for this testing, and it had heard that there were few contract research organizations providing such services. Four of the Science Consortium donations of Vitrocell equipment were made during 2017 to facilities in Belgium, the U.K. and the U.S. while, in 2019, it recognized the need for two donations to provide additional equipment at IIVS. So this year, the Science Consortium donated a $50,000 Vitrocell Cloud device that can be used for testing personal care products, for example, but not tobacco products. And then, in order to spread the costs of the second donation, it approached the four tobacco companies known to be interested in advancing non-animal testing methods, and they contributed $20,000 each with the Science Consortium putting in $10,000.

    Vitrocell Systems describes itself as one of the pioneers of in vitro exposure systems with 20 years of experience in providing test systems in which cultivated cells from the respiratory tract or bacteria are exposed to aerosols.

    Managing Director Tobias Krebs told me that the company had significantly broadened its range of turnkey systems comprising smoking machines, exposure systems, dosimetry tools and analytical instruments. Demand for these advanced systems was creating constant growth, he said, due to two factors, one of which was the increased testing needs of industry, research institutes and regulatory bodies as new products were developed by the industry in ever shorter cycles. There was a need for electronic nicotine-delivery systems, heated-tobacco products and hybrid devices to be compared with traditional combustible products in respect of their toxicological profiles.

    At the same time, there was a clear trend for the industry and regulators to seek alternatives to animal testing. The acceptance of alternative methods had increased during recent years with the goals of sacrificing fewer animals, of obtaining reliable results faster and of reducing costs.

  • Tackling E-waste

    Tackling E-waste

    The Tobacco Institute of Japan (TIOJ) is set to implement rules for the disposal of heat-not-burn (HnB) products that use lithium-ion batteries, reports The Mainichi.

    The initiative is a response to multiple reports of fire incidents attributed to tobacco cartridges discarded as noncombustible trash.

    Japan requires local governments and electronics manufacturers to collect lithium-ion battery-powered products including smartphones and portable video game consoles.

    However, HnB cartridges are not subject to such requirements. Without clear rules regarding the collection of these products, many local bodies do not accept them as trash.

    Japan Tobacco (JT) launched a pilot program in May to collect used HnB tobacco products at its shops in Tokyo, and the tobacco companies will set rules based on JT’s system.

    HnB products have been on sale in Japan for about five years, sold by TIOJ member companies JT, Philip Morris Japan and British American Tobacco Japan. To date, more than 10 million units have been sold in the country.

  • Plastic alternative

    Plastic alternative

    Researchers at the California Institute of Technology have found a way to turn cells from tobacco plants into a strong material with wood-like mechanical properties, offering a potential alternative to unsustainable plastic, reports MIT Technology Review.

    The material’s stiffness and strength reportedly surpass that of commercial plastics of similar density, like polystyrene and low-density polyethylene, while being entirely biodegradable.

    To test the biodegradability of the new material, the researchers buried their samples in agricultural soil along with ordinary wood and watched what happened. Both samples initially gained weight by absorbing water from the soil, but then both broke down naturally.

    “We observe an almost complete biodegradation of the biocomposite 14 weeks after initial incubation,” a team member said.

  • Farm worker abuse alleged

    Farm worker abuse alleged

    British American Tobacco, Imperial Brands and Philip Morris International are buying leaf tobacco that could have been picked by exploited African migrants working in Italy, according to a story by Luca Muzi and Lorenzo Tondo for The Guardian.

    Workers, including ‘children’, reportedly said they were forced to work up to 12 hours a day without contracts or sufficient health and safety equipment in Campania, a region that produces more than a third of Italy’s tobacco.

    The Guardian investigation, which spanned three years, found that some workers from Africa were paid about €3 an hour, about half the amount paid to other workers, who were mostly Albanians, Romanians and Italians.

    Tammaro Della Corte, leader of the General Confederation of the Italian Workers labor union in Caserta, was quoted as saying: “Unfortunately, the reality of the work conditions in the agricultural sector in the province of Caserta, including the tobacco industry, is marked by a deep labor exploitation, low wages, illegal contracts and an impressive presence of the caporalato [illegal hiring], including extortion and blackmailing of the workers.”

    According to an internal report by the farmers’ organisation ONT Italia, seen by The Guardian and confirmed by a document from the European Leaf Tobacco Interbranch, BAT, Imperial and PMI bought three-fifths of Italian tobacco in 2017. PMI alone bought 21,000 tons of the 50,000 tons harvested that year.

    The Guardian quoted these companies as saying they bought tobacco from suppliers who operated under a strict code of conduct to ensure fair treatment of workers. PMI reportedly said it had not come across any abuse, while BAT and Imperial said they would investigate any complaints brought to their attention.

  • Grower returns squeezed

    Grower returns squeezed

    Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Industry Marketing Board (TIMB) has hiked weighing and auction floor charges, further eroding growers’ earnings, according to a story by Fidelity Mhlanga for Newsday.

    The charge has been increased from US$4.50 per bale last season to US$7.70 per bale this season, much to the chagrin of growers who feel their earnings are being squeezed.

    Mhlanga said that apart from the weighing and auction fees, other deductions incurred by farmers included a tobacco levy of 0.75 percent, TIMB stop order levies of 0.8 percent, and the Ministry of Agriculture levy of US$0.875c per kg.

    An industry source told NewsDay that the move by the TIMB would affect the viability of tobacco growing, and added that pegging fees in US$ was in violation of Statutory Instrument 33 of 2019 that required ‘prices’ to be charged in RTGS dollars [Real Time Gross Transfer dollars made up of bond notes, bond coins and RTGS balances (electronic money)].

    The sources said the TIMB had not consulted with stakeholders in coming up with a decision that ultimately affected growers’ livelihoods.

    Contacted for a comment, TIMB spokesperson Isheunesu Moyo attributed the increase in auction fees to an upsurge in the cost structure at the auction floors. “As regulators we consider the viability of all stakeholders,” he said. “The cost structure of auction floors has gone up as a result of what we expect of them, such as those related to the new payment system, among others.”

    At a time when the amount of tobacco that is sold via the auction floors is estimated at 20 percent, there is concern that the increase in charges could drive more growers to contract floors where charges remain low.

  • Problem cannot be patched

    Problem cannot be patched

    Taxpayers in the state of South Australia will pay for nicotine substitutes for prisoners as the state moves to make its jails smoke-free, according to a story by Rebecca Puddy at abc.net.au.

    The Department for Correctional Services has estimated that 80 percent of South Australia’s 2,800 prisoner-population comprises smokers, with 75 percent smoking daily.

    Under the current smoking rules, prisoners can buy their own cigarettes and tobacco from canteens.

    A $2 million bill for nicotine patches and lozenges will form part of the $6.2 million cost to taxpayers of keeping cigarettes out of the state’s prisons in the years to 2022, with additional funding set aside for health and security measures, staff costs and quit support.

    The smoking ban has received bipartisan support and strong backing from Cancer Council SA and the Public Service Association, the union representing the state’s prison guards.

    Under the current structure, SA Health pays for NRT in prisons that have not enacted a smoking ban but will hand over this cost to the Department for Correctional Services when the ban is introduced at the end of the year.

    Under the rules to be introduced as prisons become smoke-free, taxpayers will foot the bill for the first six weeks of a nicotine replacement program, with prisoners required to pay one quarter of the cost for the next three weeks, and 50 percent of the cost for the final three weeks.

    Cancer Council SA spokeswoman Alana Sparrow said the Government had worked with stakeholders to develop a “good evidence-based approach”, learning from the experiences of other states.

    “We have looked at evaluations in different states and territories – in some it has worked extremely well but we are also learning from the experiences in other states like Victoria,” she said.

    A 2018 study of former prisoners in Queensland found 94 percent relapsed to smoking within two months of their release, with 72 percent doing so on the day of their release

  • Taxing balancing act

    Taxing balancing act

    Indonesia is to follow a policy of foreshadowing cigarette excise increases in such a way as to limit smoking while lessening the impact of any cigarette-sales reduction on tobacco-industry jobs, according to a story at en.tempo.co.

    Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said the Government had to address two concerns before issuing a regulation on cigarette excise: its impacts on health and the industry.

    Sri Mulyani said that the use of tobacco by smokers, especially children, would badly affect their health in the future; so the Government imposed excise on tobacco products in a bid to lessen its consumption.

    However, on the other side of the coin, the tobacco industry employed a large number of workers, including tobacco and clove farmers.

    Speaking before millennials at a Youth Engagement event at Balai Sarbini, Jakarta, Sri Mulyani implied that, given these circumstances, it was difficult for the Government to decide whether to prioritize individual physical health or economic health.

    Therefore, she said, the Government planned to gradually increase taxes based on the roadmap of tobacco excise, which would provide “a signal to the tobacco industry and regional administrations”.

    At the same time, Sri Mulyani said, the Finance Ministry, through the Customs and Excise Directorate General, would strive to reduce the illegal trade in cigarettes.

    In 2017, the illegal trade was said to have accounted for 10.9 percent of the cigarette market, a figure that fell in 2018 to 7.03 percent.