Category: Sustainability

  • A ‘Greenprint’ for Change

    A ‘Greenprint’ for Change

    Photo: ArieStudio

    The environmental challenges presented by disposable vapes can be addressed without banning the category.

    By Stefanie Rossel

    Over the past few years, sales of disposable vapes have skyrocketed in many markets. Future Market Insights valued the global disposable e-cigarette market at $6.34 billion in 2022 and expects demand to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 11.2 percent between 2022 and 2032, reaching $18.32 billion by 2032. In both the U.K. and Germany, the world’s No. 2 and No. 3 vape markets, respectively, the disposable segment now dominates the market with a share of more than 60 percent.

    Disposable e-cigarettes are particularly popular among new users as these products come ready to use. There’s no need to fill up, press buttons or recharge. The single-use products, which can deliver up to 600 puffs—the equivalent of approximately three packs of cigarettes—don’t require any technical knowledge and are activated by drawing on them. They can be purchased almost anywhere where cigarettes are sold, which makes them attractive as an impulse buy. Nicotine salts offer a smooth vaping experience without a harsh throat hit, and sweeteners can be added without worrying about long-term contamination of the device as it is intended for short-term use anyway.

    While disposables play a significant role in weaning smokers off combustible cigarettes, they are also increasingly attracting criticism. There are concerns not only about youth uptake but also about their environmental impact. Several countries, including France, Scotland and Belgium, are considering banning disposable vapes for this reason. In early May, Australia announced the prohibition of single-use e-cigarettes.

    Like refillable devices, disposable vapes consist of a hard plastic shell, a metal heating element, a circuit board and a lithium-ion battery cell. They contain heavy metals and chemicals as well as nicotine-containing pods. In contrast to multiuse products, they are discarded after the last puff, thus posing a significant environmental burden. Some manufacturers and retailers offer takeback and recycling programs, but many vapers are unaware of the schemes. In addition, most users are oblivious to the fact that the products are electronic waste that need to be disposed of at recycling centers or returned to retailers; they simply throw the devices into the household trash.

    Due to their construction, dismantling vapes is a difficult, costly, time-consuming process that involves a lot of manual work. As a result, instead of being recycled, many disposable vapes are incinerated, which is a waste of valuable raw materials. According to a Financial Times calculation conservatively assuming a $5 billion vape market in 2022, the more than 90 million tons of lithium used to manufacture e-cigarettes that year was enough to supply more than 11,000 electric vehicle batteries while the 1,160 tons of copper contained in the devices would suffice to produce more than 16 million home electric vehicle chargers.

    John Dunne, director of the UKVIA

    Without proper regulation, there are obvious dangers that those who see vaping as their only way out of smoking will be forced to either switch back to cigarettes or risk buying products on the black market.

    Backdoor Prohibition

    While sharing the environmental concerns raised by critics, industry leaders believe there are better ways to address the problem than through bans. “We have seen in other countries that banning products will lead to smokers who were giving up [cigarettes], or planning to, returning to smoking,” says John Dunne, director general of the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA). “There is also the risk that you just feed a black market in vaping products; you just have to look to the Australian model, where all vapes are banned except on prescription, which has led to a huge black market problem. Without proper regulation, there are obvious dangers that those who see vaping as their only way out of smoking will be forced to either switch back to cigarettes or risk buying products on the black market—with all the inherent risks involved in an unregulated market.”

    Without spelling it out, EU regulators are preparing for a ban nonetheless. In December, the European Parliament and the council reached a provisional agreement to overhaul EU rules on batteries. The Battery Regulation, set to be passed this year, stipulates that 3.5 years after the rule comes into force, the batteries in portable devices must be removable and replaceable by the user. For disposable vapes, the new rules mean a de facto ban from the end of 2026.

    Dustin Dahlmann, president of the Independent European Vape Alliance, observes that an increasing number of single-use e-cigarettes is already switching to reusable systems. “This doesn’t happen merely for environmental reasons but also because of cost. We are convinced that this trend will continue. Manufacturers of disposable vapes increasingly launch their products as reusable versions. This is welcomed by consumers, not least because it makes vaping more affordable.”

    All retailers, he adds, are obliged to point out the correct disposal of one-way products to consumers. “Our campaigns in the past received positive feedback, and we are convinced that they have had a noteworthy effect. It’s also clear, however, that education of consumers must be continued at all levels.”

    Manufacturers of disposable vapes increasingly launch their products as reusable versions.

    There’s a Better Way

    In the U.K., a similar review of battery legislation has been delayed twice. The country has successfully embraced vaping as a tool for reducing smoking, but even as many smokers have quit with the help of e-cigarettes, the country has recently witnessed a surge in youth uptake, which in turn has sparked discussion about banning disposables. Such a move, Dunne says, would limit the positive impact of vaping on smoking rates, “and more smokers means more deaths and more cost to society.”

    Instead of talking about bans, vaping advocates say regulators should focus on reducing the negative effects of disposable vapes. “On youth access, the UKVIA has been calling on government to police the sale of vapes to under-18s more effectively through a number of simple steps, including on-the-spot fines for rogue resellers of up to £10,000 ($12,660), up from £2,500,” he says. “On environmental impact, the UKVIA recently held a webinar which brought together politicians, regulators, manufacturers and the waste industry to discuss the issue and subsequently published a 22-point action plan for all stakeholders to help meet the challenge. More needs to be done in both areas, and we remain committed to working with all stakeholders to build effective solutions.”

    Dubbed “Greenprint for Sustainable Vaping,” the plan proposes that retail staff receive enhanced training so that they can properly inform customers about recycling options and the greater cost-effectiveness of multiuse devices. Under the plan, shop operators would also be advised to place prominently located collection points in their stores and encourage vapers to use them.

    Manufacturers and retailers should offer incentives to customers for recycling used devices and develop public information campaigns to normalize recycling so that vapers feel peer pressure to recycle and social shame if they don’t.

    The plan calls for packaging to reinforce the message that vape devices must be recycled and for vape manufacturers to be acquainted with waste processing so that they can design their products in a way that will facilitate recycling. According to the action plan, all relevant vape businesses should be compliant with the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulations 2013, the Producer Responsibility Obligations (Packaging Waste) Regulations 2007 and other rules.

    Most vape manufacturers are innovating to make their products more environmentally friendly, says Dunne. “For example, one brand I know of is going to be launching a single-use device later this year which is over 50 percent cardboard and uses biodegradable silicon in place of plastic. Another challenge for the waste companies is actually dismantling devices, and this is also an area where manufacturers are working hard to make the process easier. We’re not there yet, but there is lots of focus on this issue, and I am optimistic that the various stakeholders can work together to find workable solutions.”

    Dunne says there is a simpler way of preventing youths from buying disposable vapes and at the same time limiting the waste problem than introducing taxes on single-use e-cigarettes, as has also been debated. “It is smokers from a disadvantaged background—who are generally in the highest smoking rate areas—who will be hit hardest by a tax on vapes, and for every one of them who returns to smoking as a result, that is a step back for all of us,” he says.

    “There is a much better solution staring us in the face. There is currently a maximum fill level of 2 mg of e-liquid in a vape, single-use or otherwise, and this arbitrary number has no logic to it, safety or otherwise. If the government were to introduce a minimum fill level of 10 mg, you instantly achieve a number of things; firstly, the price would rise to around £15 or more, pricing out underage users, and you would reduce the environmental impact by 80 percent overnight.”

  • A Gamble on Goobers

    A Gamble on Goobers

    PAM Managing Director Ronald Ngwira (left) examines fuel pellets created with leftover shells from the company’s groundnut operations. | Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Pyxus has great expectations of its Malawi groundnut business

    Like many of their customers, tobacco merchants in Malawi have been exploring supplemental lines of business—not only to ensure their future as cigarette consumption stagnates but also to help their contracted farmers develop supplemental sources of income.

    Pyxus Agriculture Malawi’s (PAM) contracted tobacco farmers often cultivate nontobacco crops, including groundnuts, maize and sunflowers. Measured by weight, its growers already produce four times more food than tobacco. As part of its efforts to improve farmer livelihoods and the communities in which they live, Pyxus has been working to find markets for some of these crops.

    The company has high expectations, especially for groundnuts, which are nutritious sources of protein, vitamins and dietary fiber. Among other health benefits, groundnuts are credited with preventing heart diseases, lowering bad cholesterol and improving fertility. Common products made from groundnuts include cooking oil, herbal supplements, butter and snack items. Groundnuts are also used as a source for animal fodder. There are three categories of groundnuts: the Hausa groundnut, the Bambara groundnut and the peanut.

    Driven by consumers’ growing appetite for protein-rich and plant-based foods, global demand for groundnuts is increasing by 4 percent per year. Market Research Future projects the value of global peanut sales alone to reach $107.4 billion by 2030. Malawi has grown groundnuts for decades. “In the 1980s, Malawi used to be a big exporter to Europe,” says PAM Managing Director Ronald Ngwira. Currently, however, Africa is a net importer of groundnuts; global supply is dominated by Argentina, India and the United States. Malawi produces 447,421 metric tons of groundnuts—less than 1 percent of global cultivation.

    A Good Match for Malawi

    In addition to enjoying strong global demand, groundnuts are suited to Malawi’s conditions. Due to the country’s landlocked location, agricultural exports must travel long distances to ports in either South Africa or Mozambique. As a semi-perishable product, groundnuts are able to tolerate such journeys without requiring expensive cold storage.

    What’s more, groundnut plants release nitrogen as they decompose, improving soil fertility and allowing farmers to reduce their fertilizer bill. Soil health has been a major concern in Malawi, where farmers struggle with high levels of acidity and insufficient levels of organic matter due in part to deforestation and less-than-optimal agricultural practices.

    Another benefit: Leftover shells from Pyxus groundnut operations can be converted into fuel pellets and green charcoal, reducing the need to cut trees for firewood and potentially saving thousands of hectares of forest. This is a big deal in Malawi, where few people have access to electricity and the majority of the country’s rapidly growing population burns wood as fuel for cooking and energy. Wood is also used by farmers to build barns and cure tobacco. Industry typically relies on coal to fuel its activities. According to Ngwira, the use of groundnut shell-based fuel has already allowed Pyxus to reduce AOTM’s factory reliance on coal by 40 percent.

    One challenge that has been holding back Malawi groundnut production is the quality of its plant varieties, which has constrained quality and productivity. To unlock the potential of groundnuts for Malawi, PAM has been researching better cultivars. Over the past few years, the company examined 1,000 strains from around the world. Looking for varieties that are high in protein, climate-change resilient and resistant to disease, PAM selected four types and presented them to the ministry of agriculture for approval. The company then invested in irrigation, mechanization and multiplication of the improved varieties to boost farmers’ yields and incomes.

    Boosting Volumes and Quality

    Tapping into its large network of tobacco field technicians, Pyxus also started offering extension services to groundnut farmers. “We have more than 150 qualified extension officers training farmers on a daily basis to assist farmers achieve better yields and quality while also ensuring track-and-trace capabilities to export into international markets,” says Ngwira. At 1 metric ton per hectare, average groundnut yields have traditionally been low in Malawi. With better cultivars, inputs and agricultural practices, however, it should be possible to increase those yields to 3 metric tons per hectare, according to PAM. Ngwira says the company will follow the same journey it took when implementing the integrated production system in tobacco, where years of farmer training resulted in substantially improved productivity and loan recovery rates.

    PAM’s investments in groundnuts are paying off already. In 2021, Malawi’s government set the minimum selling price of groundnuts at MKW330 ($0.32) per kilogram. Owing to the quality produced by its contracted farmers, Pyxus was able to offer a minimum price of MKW440 per kilogram, according to Ngwira.

    PAM is also tackling the problem of aflatoxins, poisonous carcinogens produced by certain molds that can impact agricultural crops. Historically, Malawi groundnuts have suffered from comparatively high levels of aflatoxins, but with better agricultural practices, such as quick drying to prevent the formation of fungi, it is possible to reduce contamination to below the tolerances prescribed by export markets.

    In March 2022, PAM inaugurated a $3 million processing factory in Lilongwe’s Kanengo, where it not only cleans, shells and sorts the groundnuts but also turns the leftover shells into fuel pellets. Built in a disused tobacco warehouse, the facility employs more than 100 people and has the capacity to process 50,000 tons of groundnuts per annum. It is the largest groundnut shelling plant on the African continent outside of South Africa.

    Addressing Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera and other dignitaries attending the opening ceremony, Ngwira noted that factory was key to unlocking Malawi’s potential for agricultural industrialization—which is in line with the government’s commitment to promote exports through value addition for agricultural crops.

    Ngwira is excited about the prospects for Malawi groundnuts. In addition to growing demand from major markets such as China and India, there is also a huge appetite for the product regionally. “Currently, most Malawi groundnuts are exported to the Lake Victoria region,” he says. Already home to more than half a billion people, the area’s population is projected to grow significantly. “Malawi can help supply the protein to feed those people,” says Ngwira.

    To cater to the anticipated demand, PAM aims to rapidly expand its contacted farmer base from about 7,000 smallholders at the time of the factory opening to about 30,000 in the future. In the process, it will not only create additional sources of incomes for its contracted farmers but also provide Malawi with a welcome supplement to tobacco as a source of much-needed foreign exchange.—T.T.

  • Filtrona Launches Plastic-Free Filter

    Filtrona Launches Plastic-Free Filter

    Image: Filtrona

    Filtrona launched its latest plastic-free innovation, ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter, at TabExpo in Bologna May 10-11, 2023.

    According to Filtrona, the ECO Tube Triple Carbon is a patent-pending sustainable plastic-free filter design that offers similar nicotine delivery to current filters, with a unique end visual and clean post-smoking.

    The ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter meets EU Single Use Plastics Directive requirements, is biodegradable and, based on internal studies, degrades more rapidly than filters constructed with cellulose acetate, attaining 90 percent biodegradation in 90 days. With a similar nicotine delivery as the acetate version of Tube Triple Carbon, its carbon loading capability is up to four times higher compared to existing impregnated carbon paper, according to Filtrona.

    ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter offers cigarette manufacturers an extensive array of customizable designs in various lengths, circumferences, pressure drops, carbon types, carbon sizes and configurations for ECO Tube combined segments, with each construction designed to enhance a particular brand and suit customer taste and filtration requirements.

    “With sustainability at the heart of our business, we are committed to developing more renewable, degradable and sustainable products,” said Filtrona CEO Robert Pye.

    The Bologna event was the first TabExpo show for the newly rebranded Filtrona, which adopted its former name earlier this year. Tobacco Reporter published an in-depth report about Filtrona’s rebranding in its March 2023 issue.

  • Tobaccoville Announces Water Recycling Facility

    Tobaccoville Announces Water Recycling Facility

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

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

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

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

  • Tobacco at Forefront of Closing Gender Pay Gap

    Tobacco at Forefront of Closing Gender Pay Gap

    Photo: Fokussiert

    Tobacco and alcohol companies are at the forefront of closing the gender pay gap, reports MSN, citing a study of major U.K. companies.

    While typically shunned by ethical investors, these so-called sin companies are contributing more to gender equity than some of their less controversial counterparts.

    BAT, for example, is going beyond the call of duty on gender pay, according to the research. Other top performers in this field include Guinness owner Diageo, Reckitt and Unilever.

    Across the board, the gender pay gap remains stuck at 9.4 percent in favor of men—the same as five years ago when firms first had to publish figures.

    All sectors continue to pay men more than women, but some are worse than others, with banking and finance, construction and education among the biggest offenders.

    U.K. firms, charities and public sector departments that have 250 staff or more must publish their gender pay gap on a government website.

  • Broadening the Scope

    Broadening the Scope

    Image: alexlmx

    Tobacco harm reduction initiatives should also cover e-waste management, say experts.

    Contributed

    E-waste is an emerging unintended environmental consequence of the revolution in electronic nicotine-delivery systems, threatening to undermine a technological innovation in public health. This conversation examines the intersection of regulatory policy, consumer behavior and the vaping products’ industry and hopes to map a sustainable path for the future.

    In the discussion below, John Dunne from the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) brings in the vaping industry perspective, Pieter Vorster brings expert views on global tobacco and nicotine industry transformation, and Sudhanshu Patwardhan (Sud), a nicotine expert and health-tech entrepreneur, proposes a broader definition and scope of tobacco harm reduction (THR).

    Sudhanshu Patwardhan

    Patwardhan: We know that in the U.K. and the European Union, where they are regulated, vapes, or e-cigarettes, are classed as waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE). Ideally, consumers in these countries should dispose of vapes at a household recycling center or at the shop where they bought the device. Manufacturers are also required to make recycling options available. Many consumers, however, are unaware that single-use vapes can or should be recycled. Incorrect disposal of these items can potentially release plastic, electronic and hazardous chemical waste into the environment and represent a fire hazard. How big is this issue currently? Does the industry have numbers contrasting sales to recycling?

    Dunne: In the U.K., around 459 million e-cigarettes of all kinds are purchased each year, of which 168 million, or 37 percent, are single-use vapes. Approximately 43 percent of all vapes purchased are recycled, although this number is likely much lower for single-use (“disposable”) products:

    • Twenty-three percent of e-cigarettes are recycled in-store when consumers buy a new one.
    • Twenty percent are recycled at a local authority recycling center.

    On the face of it, the 43 percent recycled figure for e-cigarettes compares favorably with the 31.2 percent of waste electrical and electronic equipment in the U.K. that was recycled or reused in the U.K. in 2021. However, vaping products’ relatively short lifespan means more waste is generated.

    Patwardhan: Good to get that broader electronic products-based perspective and the product use life cycle nuance with regards to e-cigarettes. Obviously, there is a still a gap between current practices by consumers versus what would make e-cigarettes environmentally sustainable in the long run. Pieter, do you think there are any good examples of industry players showing some leadership in this?

    Vorster: All three tobacco companies that sell single-use vaping products in the U.K.—BAT (Vuse Bar), Imperial (Blu bar) and PMI (VEEBA), for example—advise consumers not to put them in household waste and offer free returns services on their websites. This information is displayed on the webpages where these items are sold. Consumers who don’t buy these products online need to read the package insert. They are advised that the product should not be placed in household waste but collected separately for recovery and recycling. The package insert also directs users to the manufacturer’s website for details of its recycling program. Whether consumers ever read these inserts is open to debate!

    Independent U.K. brands are not far behind either; Riot Bar and Blo Bar have also introduced comprehensive recycling schemes. Blo also offers consumers one free Blo Bar for every 10 disposable vapes of any brand sent to them for recycling. Most online retailers in the U.K. offer disposal and recycling advice, and VPZ, the U.K.’s largest vaping retailer, has announced that it is introducing a comprehensive return and recycling program in its stores before the end of March.

    Patwardhan: It sounds like manufacturers are, in theory, offering the recycling option to consumers. Do we know if consumers know that these options exist? Perhaps there is an education piece that needs to be carried out by key actors in the supply chain, including manufacturers, as well as by the broader regulatory agencies? Do the regulators need to intervene, or does the industry need to act? Or both, and others?

    John Dunne

    Dunne: Recycling vapes is not straightforward and needs collaboration between adult vapers, retailers, manufacturers, regulators and companies in the waste management sector, which are involved in the current Producer Compliance Schemes under the WEEE regulations. We are liaising with DEFRA [U.K. Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs] and the Office for Product Safety and Standards and calling upon our members and the wider industry to innovate products that are easier to recycle.

    Patwardhan: Talking about multi-stakeholder initiatives, we are on the cusp of another VApril, an annual British feature in April to showcase vaping as a means to stop smoking. As we have seen with a series of successive publications from U.K. health and related authorities and charities—e.g., the 2016 Royal College of Physicians’ Nicotine Without Smoke report—e-cigarettes/vapes are a potential force for good by helping smokers quit smoking. The THR creds of e-cigarettes in the context of current adult smokers are not in doubt. However, this emerging narrative on environmental harms from disposable vapes presents a unique challenge to those in public health and policy, does it not, Pieter?

    Pieter Vorster

    Vorster: Indeed, Sud. To date, opponents of tobacco harm reduction have often relied on questionable science that is unlikely to withstand rigorous evaluation, as evidenced by numerous retractions in recent years. On the other hand, the science underlying the potential environmental and health risks posed by the inappropriate disposal of reduced-risk products isn’t subject to the same constraints. Furthermore, the emotional appeal for the “environmental harms” narrative from these products has a much broader and vocal activist constituency—thus threatening to undermine the public health arguments of THR. In short, it represents a potentially potent weaponizable tool for those opposed to THR.

    Patwardhan: I can see that the recent developments in Scotland, where an environmental activist highlighted the problem of vape littering, and separately, the decision of a large British supermarket chain to stop selling disposable vapes, signal a change in public perception and attitudes toward the product. It is as if an argument is being built in this narrative about disposables being harmful to the environment and are a lost cause as such, as well as the anecdotal observation that disposables are used by a much younger cohort, possibly those underage as well as those who have never smoked cigarettes before. If true, surely that is one issue to address through stronger regulations, especially with regards to preventing youth access and mandatory recycling requirements and refund schemes, right?

    Dunne: Preventing the sale of vaping products to minors is one of the industry’s most fundamental challenges, and our members are united behind this goal. We have recently updated our “Preventing Underage Sales Guide” to give retailers all the information they need so they don’t inadvertently sell to someone under 18. However, we need the support of the government, regulators and enforcement authorities to ensure that unscrupulous retailers who knowingly sell to young people face the full force of the law. We believe that there is a need for increased fines for rogue traders, licensing of vape retailers and a national test purchase scheme. In fact, the UKVIA’s Youth Access Prevention Task Force will propose so to regulators this month. Regarding e-waste, the industry also recognizes its environmental responsibilities, and we are working with regulators, waste management experts, product manufacturers and retailers to find a workable solution.

    Patwardhan: This is a most fascinating discussion where we find innovative 21st century nicotine products that have huge positive public health potential getting caught into an orthogonal field of great import in global public policy: sustainability and environment. In concert, responsible behavior by industry and retailers, better regulation and enforcement—and not prohibition—and consumer adoption of e-waste management solutions may well be the answer. In fact, we can go one step further and challenge all stakeholders—industry, regulators, public health and consumers—to embrace proactive e-waste management as another opportunity to reduce harms from a transforming tobacco and nicotine products’ landscape whilst maximizing the societal benefits from this shift in consumer behaviors.

  • Veolia Launches Vape Collection Service

    Veolia Launches Vape Collection Service

    Photo: alexlmx

    Resource management company Veolia has launched a national vape collection service to help provide safe disposal and recycling routes for the 3 million vapes currently thrown away in the U.K. each week.

    Veolia states that it can now facilitate the collection and transport of vaping products from retailers to a recycling facility to extract the valuable materials, including lithium, cobalt, nickel and manganese, inside.

    The recycling of these items could save more than 10 tons of lithium that could be recycled into new products from the batteries, which would save up to 72 tons of carbon emissions compared to using raw materials as producing 1 ton of lithium from ore produces around 9 tons of carbon dioxide emissions, according to Scottish Local Retailer.

    Collections will be scheduled according to demand, and in order to store and transport these materials safely, Veolia will provide retailers with individual containers of vermiculite, a mineral that will minimize fire risks from the lithium-ion batteries contained within the vapes.

    “Two vapes are thrown away every second. They might be called disposable, but they can and should be recycled,” said Donald Macphail, chief operating officer of treatment at Veolia U.K. “Our new nationwide vape collection service will provide a safe recycling avenue to retailers who provide the mandatory takeback schemes for vapes and ensure that we can extract the valuable materials contained within and mitigate any fire and environmental risks.”

  • UKVIA Publishes ‘Greenprint’

    UKVIA Publishes ‘Greenprint’

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) has published a comprehensive “Greenprint for Sustainable Vaping” following an industry-wide consultation.

    The development of a green action plan was developed with input from leading players in the waste industry, regulators, the retail sector, vape manufacturers and experts in consumer behavior. It comes as the industry has faced increased scrutiny regarding the environmental impact of vapes, particularly single-use products known as disposables.

    “Whilst entry-level single-use devices are responsible for record numbers of adult smokers switching to vaping due [to] their ease of use and convenience, the industry realizes that much more must be done to safeguard against their impact on the environment,” said UKVIA CEO John Dunne. “The fact is that disposables have been around for a while but have become hugely popular in the last couple of years, particularly with those on low incomes who are amongst the most prevalent smokers.

    “The Greenprint aims to mobilize environmental action to support a sustainable vaping sector in the future. It covers the development of recycling infrastructure, which is fit for the vaping industry, new vape innovations that make products more recyclable and reusable as well as the support that needs to be put in place to encourage greater retailer and consumer participation in the environmentally conscious disposal of vape products.”

  • Dutch Minister: Ban Filters to Reduce Litter

    Dutch Minister: Ban Filters to Reduce Litter

    Photo: Yakiv

    The best way to prevent cigarette filter litter is a ban, the Netherland’s junior infrastructure minister, Vivianne Heijnen, said in a briefing to Members of Parliament.

    An outright ban on filters is the most effective option to achieve the government’s target of reducing filter litter by 70 percent, according to Heijnen. The current model of discouraging smoking and littering, she says, will result in only a 15 percent reduction by 2026.

    Cigarette filters contain chemicals and microplastics, which take years to break down.  take years to break down. 

    A filter ban would have to be Europe-wide, Heijnen told Dutch News, because a uniquely Dutch ban would be in contravention of the European free trade agreement. She suggested a ban be included in the 2026 renewal of the European guideline on single-use plastics.

    More local bans on smoking at beaches and more smoke-free festivals and smoke-free zones in public spaces are also among the measures Heijnen proposed.

  • Smoore Gets Top ESG Rating

    Smoore Gets Top ESG Rating

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Sustainalytics recently released its latest ESG rating report, showing that Smoore International Holdings Limited secured the top position among global electronic atomization companies, according to a company press release.

    Smoore’s ESG score improved from 27.9 to 24.6.

    Sustainalytics is an independent ESG research, rating and data company with 25 years of expertise in ESG and corporate governance research and analysis covering around 15,000 companies across the world.