Category: Sustainability

  • Coal to Tackle Cost and Deforestation in Zim

    Coal to Tackle Cost and Deforestation in Zim

    Photo: Michal

    Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Industry & Marketing Board (TIMB), Kutsaga research station and Hwange Colliery Co. have jointly developed a special coal facility to help reduce tobacco farmers’ production costs and address deforestation concerns, reports the Zimbabwe Independent.  

    The facility will benefit TIMB-registered growers with active grower numbers. TIMB said negotiations were underway with transporters to ensure that the coal is delivered to farmers on time and at affordable rates.

    “The high cost of tobacco production is one of the main challenges bedeviling tobacco farmers in Zimbabwe,” TIMB spokesperson Chelesani Tsarwe told NewsDay Farming, referring to the prices of production inputs, energy and other farming necessities.

    The coal facility, she said, will help tobacco farmers realize significant savings in the curing process.

     Zimbabwe Tobacco Growers Association president George Seremwe welcomed the arrangement. “The outcry has been us tobacco farmers through our associations, lobbying and advocating reduction on the cost of production and they started sort of goal rolling by engaging different suppliers in this case, Hwange Colliery Co. to come up with cheaper modalities, better way of cushioning the farmer in the form of reduction on the cost of production,” he said. “We are very happy and pleased to hear such an initiative happening.”

    More than 70 percent of Zimbabwe’s  tobacco crop is cured using unsustainable wood, with deforestation increasing, according to Zimbabwe Tobacco Association CEO Rodney Ambrose.

    “While the industry embarks on reforestation programs, more efficient curing systems and alternate sustainable curing fuels, stop-gap measures need to be put in place in order to ensure that we maintain our production levels and protect the livelihoods of thousands of farmers,” he said.

     “One of the measures is coal, and to reduce the cost of purchasing and delivering the product to farmers.”

     Zimbabwe achieved a record crop of 296 million kg of tobacco for the 2022-2023 season, earning nearly $1 billion from leaf sales.

     This year’s sales volumes put Zimbabwe on track to achieve its target of 300 million kg by 2025, as formulated in the Tobacco Value Chain Transformation Plan, ahead of schedule.

  • Sinditabaco Attends ESG Experience

    Sinditabaco Attends ESG Experience

    Image: SindiTabaco

    Ricardo Voltolini, CEO and founder of the consultancy Ideia Sustentavel, gave the opening lecture of the first edition of ESG Experience on Oct. 3 at the University of Santa Cruz do Sul (UNISC) Memorial Auditorium in Santa Cruz do Sul, according to SindiTabaco. Promoted by ACI, the event was attended by several business leaders from the region.

    Voltolini portrayed the challenges and trends of sustainability and environmental, social and governance (ESG). “Today it is a trendy topic, but it has existed for many years. It has been called private social investment, corporate social responsibility, sustainability—in two versions—and, more recently, ESG, a concept that was born in 2004, but only in 2019 did companies bring up the discussion that it is necessary to put purpose ahead profit,” he said.

    According to him, there has never been so much talk about sustainability because there have never been so many pressure factors, especially climate change, and the new generations that are beginning to take power. “Millennials already come with a pro-sustainability generational chip. This new way of seeing the business can accelerate changes,” he highlighted.

    In the afternoon, ESG cases focused on the environmental area were discussed with the participation of representatives from the three largest cigarette companies installed in Brazil (Philip Morris, BAT and Japan Tobacco International), CORSAN and Azul Conecta. Sustainability and innovation for a smoke-free future; advances in the protection of biodiversity; sustainable agriculture for small properties; payment program for environmental services and innovation focused on sustainability were the topics discussed by the panelists.

    Iro Schuenke, president of the Interstate Tobacco Industry Union (SindiTabaco), participated in the moment focused on governance cases, together with three other panelists: Jorge Hoelzel Neto, management facilitator and president of the Mercur advisory board; Luiz Motta, CEO at Excelsior Alimentos; and Fabiola Eggers, institutional relations manager at Fruki.

    In his presentation, Schuenke detailed the tobacco sector’s initiatives within the scope of ESG and highlighted the importance of the Integrated Tobacco Production System to achieve effective results in the different pillars of ESG: environmental, social and governance. “Our integration model is a competitive differentiator that unites the links in the production chain with the purpose of delivering a product of quality and integrity, but more than that, together, these links activate good ESG practices, often in an innovative way and pioneering,” he said.

    During the event, the Pact for Regional Environmental Valorization was signed between the Vale do Rio Pardo Intermunicipal Services Consortium (Cisvale), the Santa Cruz do Sul Commercial and Industrial Association (ACI), the Brazilian Tobacco Growers Association (Afubra) and SindiTabaco. The signing was accompanied by the mayor of Santa Cruz do Sul, Helena Hermany, and the vice rector of UNISC, Andreia Valim. The pact aims to identify and develop socio-environmental actions, taking into account the principles highlighted by the region and integrating public authorities, associations, entities, communities, companies and public control bodies to promote the integration of environmental actions and consolidate long-lasting short term, medium term and long term. The following principles guide collective actions: commitment to environmental sustainability; biodiversity conservation; climate change and resilience; sustainable resource use; environmental education and public engagement; partnerships and collaboration; monitoring and evaluation; transparency and accountability; innovation and problem-solving; and heritage for future generations.

  • UKVIA Launches Vape Recycling Info Hub

    UKVIA Launches Vape Recycling Info Hub

    Image: jpgon

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) has announced that it is launching a new web-based information hub, as well as a special Sustainable Vaping Week campaign during October, designed to get vapers, the vaping industry and those outlets that sell vapes to act now for the benefit of the environment.

    While the sector is making progress in limiting its impact on the environment, including the development of more recyclable product innovations and the introduction of collection schemes, a recent report by Material Focus highlights that some 5 million single use vapes are thrown away each week, according to a UKVIA release.

    The new resource hub and week-long campaign will provide vapers with information on the dos and don’ts of recycling single use vapes as well as access to locations where they can dispose of their devices in an environmentally considerate way. Retailers and other outlets, such as pubs and clubs, will also be able to download educational resources to educate their customers about recycling single use vapes across the week and throughout the year.

    There will also be guidance provided for those responsible for producing, importing, distributing and selling vape devices to ensure they are operating legally at all times when it comes to meeting environmental regulations and are working closely and effectively with reputable waste management companies.

    “There have been calls for the banning of single use vapes in part due to their environmental impact,” said John Dunne, director general of the UKVIA. “However, a ban is not the answer—firstly disposable vapes are proven to be hugely effective in getting smokers to switch from their habits to considerably less harmful vapes, due to their ease of use, convenience and low entry price points. They are the main reason why smoking is currently at record low levels across the U.K. In addition, through the collective efforts of a range of stakeholders, we can reverse the current impact on the environment arising from vapers throwing them away.

    “The initiatives we are announcing will play a key role in this process by educating vapers about how they can play a critical role in being environmentally considerate when disposing of their vapes. They will also give much needed guidance to the vaping industry and other sectors, such as hospitality and general retail, about what they need to be doing to support the collection of vape waste, thereby enabling significantly higher recycling rates than we are currently seeing for these devices.”

    The Sustainable Vaping Week will take place beginning Oct. 16, following International E-Waste Day on Oct. 14. The resource hub will become a permanent source of information on vaping and the environment.

    The UKVIA will be providing a range of content for all of its members and the wider industry to promote and share via their offline and online retail stores as well as through their communications channels to educate vapers about how they can make a positive difference to the environment as a result of changing their throwaway behaviors.

  • Philippines Ag Dept. Supports Intercropping

    Philippines Ag Dept. Supports Intercropping

    Image: Yü Lan

    The Philippines’ Department of Agriculture (DA) and local government units in tobacco producing areas are urging intercropping on tobacco fields to give farmers extra income and to make up for lost markets caused by smoking concerns, according to the Philippine News Agency.

    High-value crops, such as rice, corn, garlic, onions, tomatoes and bamboo, can be planted alongside tobacco to help expand farmer income, according to DA Undersecretary Deogracias Victor Savellano. Intercropping will also help contribute to the Philippines’ food security.

    Despite changing views toward smoking and tobacco, Savellano stated that the Department of Agriculture along with the National Tobacco Administration (NTA) must sustain the domestic tobacco industry as it affects about 2.2 million Filipinos and their livelihoods.

    The domestic tobacco market generates billions in excise taxes annually, much of which funds the universal healthcare program.

    “The government cannot allow the tobacco industry to sunset despite changes in consumers’ attitude toward cigarettes. However, we are now focusing on the export market … to make up for any decline in revenues generated domestically,” Savellano explained.

    The NTA is pressing for more strict government responses to smuggling and other illicit tobacco activity. According to Robert Ambros, NTA regulatory head, government revenue loss due to illicit tobacco trade is estimated to be over PHP30 billion ($528.2 million) by the end of 2023.

    “These past years, we had seen so much change in our health policies that affected the tobacco industry,” said President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. in an August speech delivered on his behalf by his nephew, Ilocos Norte Governor Matthew Manotoc. “As such, we must seek ways to protect the livelihood of thousands of our tobacco farmers.”

  • BAT Plants Flowers to Address Litter

    BAT Plants Flowers to Address Litter

    Image: Marquicio

    BAT Rothmans, the Korean unit of BAT, has started a flower planting campaign called “Kkot BAT” to help prevent litter and cigarette butts in alleys.

    “Kkot” translates to “flower” and “BAT” translates to “plot;” the campaign is placing flowerpots or flowerbeds in neighborhoods suffering from litter and illegal waste disposal.

    BAT Rothmans has secured partnerships with nongovernmental organizations with close relationships to local communities.

    “Our Kkot BAT campaign is a meaningful campaign in which companies join hands with the local community for environmental solutions,” said Kim Eun-ji, the country manager of BAT Rothmans. “We will continue to give positive influence on neighborhoods with environmental, social and corporate governance efforts.”

    BAT Rothmans signed a memorandum of understanding with the Korean National Council for Conservation of Nature Seoul branch in June and planted its first flower garden in Jung-gu, Seoul, near BAT Rothmans’ headquarters.

    Following its first campaign, BAT Rothmans will plant about 20 flower gardens all over Seoul, with plans to expand its influence to Gwanak-gu, Dobong-gu and Nowon-gu by the end of the year.

  • U.K. Mulls Single-Use Vape Ban

    U.K. Mulls Single-Use Vape Ban

    The United Kingdom will likely announce a public consultation next week on a plan to ban single-use vapes, reports The Guardian.  While the government has accepted the benefits of e-cigarettes in helping smokers quit, it is increasingly concerned about the environmental impact and youth appeal of disposable products.

    Research conducted by Material Focus suggested vapers in the U.K. throw out 5 million single-use e-cigarettes every week, a fourfold increase on 2022. This amounts to eight vapes a second being discarded, with the lithium in the products enough to create 5,000 electric car batteries a year, according to the organization.

    Smokers’ rights group Forest said that if the U.K. government’s aim is to reduce smoking rates, banning disposable vapes would be “a significant own goal.”

    “Vaping has been a huge success story, with millions of smokers choosing to switch to a product that is far less risky to their health. Part of that success is due to disposable vapes which are convenient and easy to use,” said Forest Director Simon Clark.

    “The answer to the problem of children vaping is not to ban a product many adults use to help them quit smoking, but to crack down on retailers who are breaking the law and selling e-cigarettes to anyone under 18.”

    The answer to the problem of children vaping is not to ban a product many adults use to help them quit smoking, but to crack down on retailers who are breaking the law and selling e-cigarettes to anyone under 18.”

    While stressing that the plans to ban single-use vapes were only at the consultation stage and no decisions had been made yet, the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) said it too opposed the idea.  

    “We welcome the idea of a consultation on disposables as it’s key that the industry gets the opportunity to highlight the benefits, and therefore continued need, for single-use vapes as a smoking cessation method,” said UKVIA Director General John Dunne in a statement.

    A ban, however, is not the answer, he cautioned. “Some 220 people die from smoking every day, 365 days a year,” said Dunne. “Disposables have proved to be highly effective in helping smokers quit their habits due to their ease of use, accessibility and low entry price points. They are one of the main reasons as to why the number of adult smokers in Great Britain has hit record lows for the last two years according to the Office for National Statistics.”

    We welcome the idea of a consultation on disposables as it’s key that the industry gets the opportunity to highlight the benefits, and therefore continued need, for single-use vapes as a smoking cessation method.

    Dunne suggested that the issues of youth vaping and environmental damage are due in part to lax enforcement of rules designed to prevent such problems. He pointed to recent research by Arcus Compliance showing that fines handed out to retailers for underage and illicit product sales amounted to just over £2,000 ($2,494)  in 11 major provincial U.K. cities between 2021-2023.

    Dunne also warned of unintended consequences of banning disposable vapes. According to him, the black market already represents over 50 percent of the single use market in the U.K. “This would only accelerate with a ban, he cautioned.

    Dunne further highlighted industry efforts to tackle electronic waste, citing research by Waste Experts showing that disposable cigarettes are highly recyclable. “However, the biggest challenge is getting consumers to recycle their vapes and providing the waste disposal facilities in public places and at points of use that will enable higher recycling rates,” he said.

    In a note to investors, TD Cowen said a ban on disposable vapes could  benefit global tobacco companies with vapor exposure. While multinationals such as British American Tobacco and Philip Morris International have exposure to the disposable vape market in the U.K., category economics are more favorable for pod-based systems, according to the investment bank.

  • USAID and Pyxus Partner in Malawi

    USAID and Pyxus Partner in Malawi

    Photo: PAM

    The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) will award Pyxus Agriculture Malawi (PAM) $14.6 million over the next five years, Pyxus announced on its website. The money will support the company in maximizing its operational effectiveness and minimizing its exposure to financial risk as it continues to drive sustainable agriculture developments in Malawi.

    The USAID award compliments PAM’s investment to date and offsets certain company expenditures going forward as both entities work to increase the availability of high-quality, climate-smart groundnut seed varieties, boost groundnut production and processing, support improved farmer livelihood and counteract the nation’s high rate of deforestation.

    “Our company has a 30-year history of operating in Malawi and has one of the largest networks of smallholder farmers—most operating on two hectares of land or less—in the country. We have worked diligently to help our contracted farmers successfully grow and market high-quality, sustainable crops, thus improving the livelihood of the farmer, their families, their communities and the country as a whole,” said Pyxus President and CEO Pieter Sikkel, during the partnership signing ceremony at PAM’s state-of-the-art groundnut processing facility in Lilongwe, Malawi.

    “Pyxus is honored to receive this $14.6 million award from USAID, which helps our company to further build capacity, expand impact throughout the legume and forestry value chains, and unlock value for Malawi and its farmers,” added Sikkel.

    Pyxus is honored to receive this $14.6 million award from USAID, which helps our company to further build capacity, expand impact throughout the legume and forestry value chains, and unlock value for Malawi and its farmers.

    The agreement aligns with Pyxus’ global environmental, social and governance goals and identifies five focus areas to achieve success: improve Malawi’s legume seed production system through the acceleration of PAM’s current research, breeding and distribution of new high-yielding, climate-resilient, market-demanded and more nutritious legume seed varieties; increase farmer access to high-quality crop inputs and hands-on training of good agricultural practices while simultaneously working to diversify PAM’s contracted farmer base—these efforts enable farmers to increase yields, sales and incomes, driving the development of the country’s commercial agriculture sector; help address smallholder farmer financing roadblocks, which currently put a significant limitation on crop production and overall market success, through fair and affordable crop input financing—minimizing financial roadblocks can help farmers increase yields and improve their overall livelihood; enhance the quality and value of Malawi groundnuts through increased processing capacity of PAM’s groundnut facility, driving job growth, the country’s export opportunities and value addition, resulting in a more impactful private sector contribution to Malawi’s economic growth; and combat deforestation and forest and soil degradation by further developing PAM’s sustainable forestry operation and the introduction of new, innovative energy solutions and soil health amendments to the farmer.

    PAM Managing Director Ronald Ngwira (right) with employees at the company’s groundnut facility in Lilongwe (Photo: Taco Tuinstra)

    “The partnership we’ve launched today, with USAID and Pyxus, will invest in Malawians to accelerate opportunities for more sustainable, inclusive and resilient economic growth,” said USAID Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman during the signing ceremony.

    Coleman added that the partnership contributes to soil health improvements, utilization of clean energy generated from recycled agricultural waste and increasing availability of nutritious food for the Malawian people. 

    The PAM operation was founded in 2019 under Pyxus’ Value-Added Agricultural Products division. Since its inception, PAM has opened one of the largest groundnut processing facilities in Africa, gained government approval to commercialize five new legume seed varieties, cultivated and maintained more than 7,000 hectares of forestry, and unlocked additional income potential for over 20,000 smallholder farmers.

    Tobacco Reporter visited Pyxus Groundnut factory in the first half of 2023 and reported on the operation in its June print edition (see “A Gamble on Goobers“).

  • Study: Vape Litter Out of Control

    Study: Vape Litter Out of Control

    Photo: bennyrobo

    The majority of single-use vapes are disposed of improperly, with the number increasing, according to a Material Focus study.

    “Since we last published our research, the problem with single-use vapes has gotten further out of control,” said Scott Butler, executive director of Material Focus. “Single-use vapes are a strong contender for being the most environmentally wasteful, damaging and dangerous consumer product ever made. And still very few producers and retailers comply with environmental regulations and haven’t put recycling drop-off points and systems in place. This all means that too often local authorities are being burdened with the major operational and financial headaches associated with what is now the fastest growing and most dangerous waste stream in the U.K., single-use vapes.

    “Vapes, like any other electrical with a plug, battery or cable, should never be binned and always be recycled as a minimum. We need rapid growth in the number of accessible and visible vape recycling drop-off points. And we need proper financing of genuine recycling solutions to recover materials and manage fire risks. The solution is clear: immediate, significant and transparent vape industry voluntary action in advance of planned regulatory changes already earmarked by Defra. The U.K. needs more accessible recycling drop-off points in stores, in parks, in public spaces near offices, bars and pubs, and in schools, colleges and universities. With 75 percent of vapers thinking that producers and retailers should provide more information that states that vapes can be recycled, the word ‘disposable’ should no longer be used in any marketing and promotion.

    “Until single-use vape producers, importers and retailers act to genuinely comply with and finance their legal environmental responsibilities, then the calls for banning the sale of them will only strengthen.” 

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) acknowledged the environmental challenge posted by single-use vape and said it was committed to helping develop solutions to the problem.

    “We welcome the solutions put forward by Material Focus and are leading industry action in a number of these areas and more,” the UKVIA wrote in a statement. “Education of consumers about how to recycle single-use vapes; product innovations that enhance recycling rates; compliance with the current regulations; and investment in waste collection points at point of use and not just at point of sale are all critical in reducing the environmental impact of single-use vapes.

    “We must protect the environment while also recognizing the contribution disposable vapes have made in helping adult smokers start on their quit journeys, in turn helping to achieve the government’s 2030 smoke-free ambition. The devices are one of the main reasons why for a second year running, smoking rates have hit record low levels in Great Britain, according to Office of National Statistics data published this week. Cigarettes are also still the single most littered item on the planet. Over a billion smokers worldwide discard a combined 4.5 trillion cigarette butts every year.

    “Over 250 people die every day in the U.K. from smoking, and cigarettes cost the NHS [National Health Service] around £2.6 billion [$3.25 billion] every year; this is a huge price to pay, and disposable vapes offer a highly effective, proven and considerably less harmful alternative than conventional cigarettes because of their accessibility, ease of use and price points.”

    The UKVIA added that they will be launching a “Sustainable Vaping Week” to help educate e-cigarette users about proper disposal of single-use, and other, devices.

    Secondhand Smoke Can Increase Lead Levels: Study

    Secondhand smoke may be a source of chronic lead exposure in children and adolescents, according to a recent BMC Public Health study.  

    The study analyzed national data on blood lead levels and secondhand smoke exposure in children and teenagers ages 6 to 19 from 2015 to 2018. Levels of lead and cotinine were assessed, and it was found that average blood lead levels in what was considered the intermediate and high tobacco smoke exposure groups were 18 percent and 29 percent higher, respectively, than levels in the lowest tobacco smoke exposure group. The study also showed that a larger number of boys had detectable lead levels as well as a larger number of Black children and adolescents compared to other ethnic groups studied.

    Children aged 6 to 10 were more likely to have elevated lead levels than older subjects, and children in low-income households had a 27 percent higher lead level than children from high-income households.

    This lead exposure creates a dangerous situation for youth; lead does not dilute when exposure decreases and the body does not naturally excrete the metal. Lead accumulates in the bones and leaches into blood, and exposure can lead to numerous neurological problems like nerve damage, cognitive problems, loss of IQ points and potentially Alzheimer’s disease and schizophrenia. The only way to remove lead from the body is through an oral medical treatment, according to the Conversation.

     

     

  • Vape Recycling Introduced in Switzerland

    Vape Recycling Introduced in Switzerland

    Image: SENS eRecycling

    E-cigarette sales in Switzerland have increased over the past few years, with 10 million products imported in 2022. Most vapes end up in the landfill rather than being recycled as required by the Ordinance on the Return, Taking Back and Disposal of Electrical and Electronic Equipment.

    In conjunction with various partners, SENS eRecycling has developed an industry solution for the environmentally friendly disposal of e-cigarettes, according to the company’s website.

    Upon request, SENS eRecycling will deliver vape recycling bags to any e-cigarette sales outlet; the bags can be used to collect returned e-cigarettes and send them back to SENS eRecycling by post. Sales outlets and consumers can also hand in used vapes to any SENS collection point throughout Switzerland.

  • Cruel and Unnecessary

    Cruel and Unnecessary

    Photo: May M. Breathtaking Research

    Animal studies are not needed to obtain U.S. marketing authorization.

    By George Gay

    Obtaining U.S. marketing authorization for a vaping product does not require carrying out studies involving nonhuman animals (NHAs), so the question arises as to why such studies have been undertaken on behalf of some vape manufacturers—a question that is brought into sharp focus given these studies are financially expensive and, in my opinion, morally demeaning and inherently cruel.

    Let’s be clear, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, to which premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) have to be made in respect of what it refers to as electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS), does not require that applications include the results of such studies. Indeed, I am led to believe that the FDA has approved applications that have not included such results.

    And it needs to be emphasized that I am talking here only about studies carried out in respect of consumer lifestyle products. These NHA studies are not being used as part of a quest to find a cure for or relief from disabling medical conditions suffered by humans, which some might argue would lend them moral weight. They are being carried out in respect of a product some people choose to use. They are being carried out for reasons I find unfathomable and indefensible, especially given that some of the manufacturers that will have caused them to be undertaken expend considerable efforts on publicly burnishing their otherwise extensive ethical codes.

    How, it is reasonable to ask, can a corporation, regarded in law as a person, countenance such studies? An NHA, being sentient, has moral status, and a person has, as well as moral status, moral agency: moral responsibility in respect of those with moral status, including NHAs. And this comprises an important principle to defend because those with moral status but no moral agency also include children.

    And it is important to bear in mind that these NHA studies are not being carried out to determine whether vaping is safe. Nobody could believe that inhaling anything other than unadulterated air could be anywhere near safe, though it is generally accepted, even by the FDA, that replacing smoking with vaping reduces consumers’ exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents and the risks consumers run. Also, most of the products for which applications have been made had already been on the market for a considerable time—time enough to determine that they were unlikely to raise acute medical issues.

    No, the results of such studies and others are currently used to allow a decision to be made on whether the product being tested is appropriate for the protection of public health (APPH) in general. According to the law, the FDA must consider the risks and benefits to the whole population, including both tobacco users and nonusers, taking account of the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such products and the increased or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such products.

    In other words, APPH is about taking a utilitarian approach; it is about trying to ensure the maximum good for the maximum number of people. So far, so good. But, like utilitarianism, APPH has a basic problem because it requires foretelling the future, something that is not within our power. In part, it requires FDA scientists to foretell the destructive habits that, in the future, the young will decide are fashionable or not and so take up or discard.

    In any case, I believe that most reasonable people would view as cruel the way NHAs are treated when forced to take part in vaping studies. And I hope they, including smokers and vapers, will have the moral fortitude to demand the studies be stopped. That they have not done so in the past could, I suppose, be down to ignorance, real or feigned, of the methodologies used.

    Well, if you are ignorant of these methodologies and want to remain so, best look away now. According to one methodology, the NHAs are first quarantined and acclimated to the laboratory where they are housed in polycarbonate cages with hardwood bedding. Then, for up to six hours on five consecutive days, they are subjected to conditioning in nose-only exposure restraint tubes, which are made of polycarbonate tapered on one end to the approximate shape of the NHA’s head, which are too narrow to allow the NHA to turn around and which are capped at the other end.

    Once acclimated, the NHAs, unless moribund or already terminated, spend up to six hours a day for up to 90 consecutive days trapped in this manner, where they are forced—the methodology uses the word “permitted”—to inhale aerosols, vapor, controls (filtered air or “vehicles” without nicotine and/or flavors) or cigarette smoke (for comparison), depending on the group to which they are assigned. The design of the tubes is such that the NHAs breathe the test atmospheres with minimal whole-body “surface” contamination, which, from a scientific perspective, is helpful because whole-body exposure complicates the interpretation of findings that in such cases include the effects of dermal and oral exposure due to grooming. From the perspective of the NHAs, however, the design is hurtful, because it is about tightly jamming them into the tubes, with predictable, crippling results.

    What then happens to the NHAs can be summed up by some of the phrases used in the methodology: “ophthalmic examinations”; “exsanguination”; “animals scheduled for necropsy”; “moribund animals”; “scheduled termination”; “found dead or humanely terminated.” Or, being a little more specific: “… [b]lood for hematology and serum chemistry analysis was collected via the retro-orbital [behind the eye socket] plexus ….”

    It is important to keep in mind that these studies and outcomes, which invariably end with the NHAs being killed and dissected and their organs sliced and examined, are being carried out on and suffered by NHAs that derive no benefit from their suffering. They are treated as a resource—as if they had no intrinsic value. Indeed, leaving aside economic outcomes, it is difficult to see who does benefit from these studies, though it is obvious that many are diminished by them.

    Meanwhile, the stress levels of the NHAs under study must go through the roof, as is evidenced by the sorts of outcomes awaiting them after being so constrained: “lacerations on left forelimb”; “continued lameness”; “difficulty in ambulating with front limbs”; “left elbow and left forelimb observed to be swollen”; “found to be in a hunched posture with labored, noisy breathing”; observed to have dried red discharge around the nostrils”; “deep abrasions on the caudal aspect of both tarsal joints”; “worsening condition and unalleviated pain”; “found dead on Study Day 79,” or, more specifically: “All of the moribund terminations … observed during the study appeared to be exposure related and can be attributed to animal activity in the nose-only restraint tube in response to increasing aerosol concentration.”

    Some NHA studies were carried out in respect of cigarette smoke. These were comparative studies, undertaken even though it is obvious that just one person switching from smoking to vaping would, of itself and with no other factors present, shift the dial of public health positively—albeit by a quantum amount. Anyway, the following gives an idea of how the NHAs came out of the smoke-exposure studies: “The observations of discolored ears, nasal discharge, rough coat, respiratory abnormality, decreased activity, mouth discharge, swelling and limb weakness are considered test-article-related findings,” we are told.

    I simply don’t understand how a scientist could accept that study results, obtained as they are by forcing a creature the size of a rat to inhale for hours at a time huge amounts of vapor or smoke while being held under intolerably stressful conditions, could in any way inform a debate about the effects that might be suffered by your average vaper or smoker out on a bright morning for a coffee with friends. That, of course, comes from my unscientific perspective, but many years ago, the director of Europeans for Medical Advancement wrote that NHAs were doomed to fail as experimental models of Homo sapiens. “The human genome project has revealed that small genetic variations between species create profound biological differences that preclude extrapolation from one species to another,” she wrote. “Studying dogs and rodents to elucidate human disease is archaic: The cutting edge of science today is focused on variations between individual people at the level of snips (single nucleotide polymorphisms).”

    “Archaic?” So why are such NHA studies still carried out and still, I am told, regarded by some as being the “gold standard”? My guess is that it is down to the inertia that plagues our species, wedded as it is to dragging behind it the burden of history and tradition. The tobacco/nicotine industry carries an especially heavy historical load, and scientists are far from immune from such burdens. As Thomas S. Kuhn once wrote, scientists are creatures of tradition: They aim to conserve and extend tradition, not to overthrow it, and revolutionary change—when it occurs—is the product of conservative impulses running up against obdurate evidence.

    Of course, while I have examined the way NHAs are used, I have not looked at how many of these unfortunate creatures have been, in my view, mistreated in pursuit of the protection of public health. And this is where it gets difficult because the FDA does not count the number of NHAs subjected to studies, and so no overall figure is made public. But it is possible to take a stab at it. I know from information obtained from the FDA through a freedom of information application (FOIA) by Joseph Manuppello of The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine that applications in respect of 10 products resulted in studies being carried out on about 2,400 NHAs (some were 14-day studies, others 90-day studies); so, more than 200 animals per individual product. It is also known that the FDA received applications in respect of more than 9 million products.

    But care must be taken here. Manuppello, who obtained nearly all the information contained in this story and who attempted, not always successfully, to keep me on a scientific path, was at pains to point out that, for various reasons, it was unlikely that animal studies were carried out in respect of many of those 9 million applications. This is an important point to make, but it is similarly important to add that even one study is too many.

    Finally, if your company is still wavering on the question of animal studies in respect of vape product PMTAs, it might be reassuring to note something indicated in publicly available documents and in information Manuppello was able to establish through information he obtained via his FOIA on successful PMTAs made in respect of similar products owned by two companies. One of the companies submitted the results of animal studies with its PMTA; the other apparently did not and in not doing so provided evidence that animal studies are not needed for FDA approval (Table 1).

    Surely, this points up a moral imperative and at least two opportunities. It means that, if it has the competence to do so, the FDA ought, as a matter of urgency, to change its position on animal studies by saying it will not consider the results of such studies, something that would surely make the PMTA process more efficient. At the same time, such a stance would save manufacturers the financial and moral burden of having such studies conducted on their behalf while allowing those that qualify to promote their products, in so far as they can, as “not tested on animals.”

    In fact, if there are any U.S. consumers reading this piece, they might like to consider writing to the manufacturers of their favorite vapes to ask them if those products or any of their constituent parts were or will be tested on animals. And while U.S. readers are in the letter-writing mode, they might like to write with their thoughts on vape product animal studies either to the Center for Tobacco Products’ director, Brian King, or its Office of Science director, Matthew Farrelly (CTP Leadership | FDA).

    I genuinely believe they would like to hear from you.

     

    Number of NHAs Used to Test ENDS and Combustible
    Cigarettes

    Products Tested

    14-Day

    90-Day

    In Vitro

    TOTAL

    Logic VapeLeaf Regular Tobacco

    47

    196

    243

    Logic VapeLeaf Menthol Green

    47

    196

    243

    Logic VapeLeaf Menthol Purple

    47

    196

    243

    Logic Power Regular Tobacco

    196

    0

    196

    Logic Power Menthol

    196

    0

    196

    Logic Power Cherry

    55

    196

    0

    251

    Logic Pro Tobacco

    189

    0

    189

    Logic Pro Menthol

    55

    189

    0

    244

    Logic Pro Cherry

    189

    0

    189

    Logic Pro Berry Mint

    189

    0

    189

    Pall Mall Red Kings (for Logic)

    210

    0

    210

    Njoy (7 ENDS products, redacted)

    0

    0

    Total NHAs Used

       

    2,393