Category: Technology

  • Leader of the pack

    Leader of the pack

    An astonishing share of cigarette packages are printed and converted on the machines of a single supplier.

    By George Gay

    If I were asked to list suppliers of tobacco machinery, Bobst would not be one of them. And in a way, this is odd because, as Alfred Ulli, Bobst’s marketing and sales director, told me during a telephone interview in August, if you pull a cigarette from a pack, there is an 80 percent chance that the blank from which the pack was formed was printed and converted on a Bobst machine. Most of Bobst’s Lemanic tobacco industry-focused machinery is used for producing hinge-lid blanks, but some of its other machinery is used for producing other types of tobacco packaging along with printed tipping papers, inner frames and inner liners.

    It is also the case that roughly 80 percent of the Bobst Lemanic presses used by printers and converters for producing tobacco industry materials is used only for such purposes while just 20 percent is also used for producing materials for packing the products of other industries.

    Clearly, while Bobst might not be a tobacco industry machinery supplier in the strictest sense, it is a vital contributor to the industry’s supply chain. For all sorts of reasons, tobacco products may not be sold without first packing them.

    Of course, there are several reasons why Bobst’s printing and converting machinery cannot be seen to fit within the tobacco industry fold, not the least of which is scale. Such machinery is at least 40 meters in length, for instance. Bobst’s Lemanic lines usually run 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and the users invariably employ Bobst trained operators and maintenance crews to keep them running efficiently.

    This focus on training is unsurprising. Bobst offers a complete range of dedicated tobacco industry machinery, including, basically, two models of presses: a high-productivity machine for high-volume brands such as Marlboro and what it calls a medium-productivity machine with production levels about half those of the bigger machine. But each machine is custom-made to the user’s specifications; if you could see 100 machines, you would be looking at 100 different configurations.

    Asked what proportion of a machinery supplier’s business with the printing and converting industry would be accounted for by parts and services, Ulli estimated a maximum of one-third. In part, this would be because the printing and converting industry has a parallel supply chain for what it refers to as “tooling.” Tooling parts, such as printing cylinders and cutting forms, tends to be the preserve of local suppliers not press suppliers such as Bobst.

    Nevertheless, Bobst provides parts and services in a number of ways, one of which is a simple reactive service that can employ remote diagnostics and that delivers parts and, if needed, technicians when required. But in order to prevent nonscheduled production stops, Bobst offers preventative maintenance programs: half yearly or yearly inspections during which its technicians identify worn parts so they can be replaced before they fail. And yes, it will provide tooling parts as required for each job as well.

    On the other hand, Bobst offers training and instruction for machinery users’ own maintenance personnel so they can carry out regular and preventive maintenance, and it provides training for press operators and managers.

    As part of its maintenance scheme, Bobst runs an obsolescence program in which it regularly informs customers about parts that are no longer available on the market and offers replacements with an equivalent performance. These are mostly electric or electronic parts that Bobst does not make itself.

    Finally, it offers an upgrade program under which it will provide machine adaptations in line with new requirements, depending on the age of the machine and the changes required. Ulli gave as an interesting example the changes that had to be made to some machinery so that it could produce the new types of packaging required by the arrival of heat-not-burn products to the market.

    So what does the future hold for tobacco packaging requirements? Ulli made no bones about the fact that the years of volume growth, stretching from the 1970s to the early years of the new millennium, are over. Cigarette consumption simply isn’t growing. “At the same time, tobacco consumption is changing with ever new and more and more sophisticated packaging as well as new types of products,” he said. “What is new—and this is just the beginning—is that the brand owners are forced by consumers to come out with new products. There is a new market approach, which will require new designs, new boxes and all with faster time-to-market requirements. The tobacco industry will continue to develop, and Bobst will remain a supplier of choice.”

  • Hybrid device well received

    Hybrid device well received

    KT&G sold more than 200,000 of its lil Hybrid devices within 80 days of their launch in South Korea, according to a story by Baek Byung-yeul for The Korea Times.

    The new device is a hybrid in that it uses both electronic-cigarette and heat-not-burn (HNB) technologies, which means that the consumer uses both e-liquid cartridges and tobacco sticks at the same time.

    The company’s lil Hybrid device, its MIIX tobacco sticks and e-liquid cartridges were launched in December.

    KT&G said yesterday that sales of the hybrid device were growing faster than those of the original lil HNB device, which took about 100 days to pass the 200,000 mark.

    Sales of its lil HNB device hit one million in October 2018 and 1.5 million this month.

    South Korea’s e-cigarette market has seen growing competition in recent years and industry insiders believe the race to take the lead will peak this year because JUUL Labs is expected to roll out its e-cigarette.

    Lim Wang-seop, the chief of KT&G’s innovative product department, was quoted as saying that his company had been developing new products that could compete with Juul.

    The e-cigarette market accounted for only 3.13 percent of the entire tobacco market in South Korea, he said, but KT&G expected this share to grow to about 14 percent to 15 percent after the introduction of Juul.

    Nevertheless, Cho Sang-hoon, an analyst at Samsung Securities, was quoted as saying that KT&G wouldn’t be negatively affected by the market changes.

    KT&G’s share in the regular cigarette market would grow by about one percent to 62.9 percent this year, while its share in the e-cigarette market would increase to about 30 percent this year, from about 17 percent in 2018.

  • Speakers named

    Speakers named

    The organizers of the 2019 Global Forum on Nicotine have announced the names of 16 of the speakers who are due to take part in the conference.

    The conference, whose theme is, It’s time to talk about nicotine, will be held at the Marriott Hotel, Warsaw, Poland, on June 13-15.

    It is due to include plenary sessions, symposia, panel discussions, poster presentations, and satellite sessions.

    In an earlier announcement, the organizers said the program committee would use selected abstracts to construct themed sessions.

    The names of other speakers and the draft program are due to be posted on line shortly.

    Meanwhile, the organizers said that abstracts for poster presentation could be submitted until March 31.

    Abstracts should be submitted on-line, via the conference registration system at: https://gfn.net.co/programme/submit.

    Registration for the conference is open.

  • Focus on young people

    Focus on young people

    British American Tobacco has said that it will continue to work with the US Food and Drug Administration as the agency advances new policies aimed at preventing youth access to flavored tobacco products.

    The FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, yesterday made a statement on preventing young people from obtaining such products; as described on this website yesterday under the heading Haste urged.

    “We welcome the FDA … shining a spotlight on the important issue of youth access to vapor products,” a BAT spokesperson was quoted as saying in a note posted on the company’s website. “We have always been clear that youth should not use vapor products and have had stringent measures in place to address this for some time.

    “In relation to today’s announcement, we share the FDA’s concerns that some flavors, such as those resembling ‘kid-friendly’ food products, may play a role in increasing youth appeal and that marketing activities should not be directed to youth. We have never marketed such vapor flavors; we have supported measures to remove vapor products intended to mimic children’s food products or otherwise designed to target youth and have procedures in place to ensure our products are only marketed to adult tobacco consumers.

    “We believe flavors are important in helping adult smokers migrate away from cigarettes, and the flavors we market are directed at helping adult smokers who are looking for a potentially less harmful alternatives to cigarettes.

    “We already have third-party age verification processes for online sales. We will work with our many convenience retailers to ensure that tobacco, mint and menthol, which are our top selling flavours, remain available for consumers who are looking for potentially less harmful alternatives to cigarettes. We also have plans to make our flavored products available in other age restricted locations, including in specialist vape stores. As with all our retail partners, we will work with any new partners who stock our products to ensure they have appropriate age verification mechanisms.

    “In respect of the proposals on bringing forward the PMTA [FDA pre-market tobacco applications] date for flavored products, given our years of product development and scientific assessment of our vapor products, we are well-positioned to file PMTAs for our VUSE products and plan to do so ahead of the 2021 deadline.

    “We will continue working with the FDA as the agency moves this proposed compliance change forward over the coming weeks. We will be submitting comments for the FDA to review and consider as the agency works to finalise the guidance document.”

  • Plugging into the future

    Plugging into the future

    Plug and Play, a global leader in technology incubators, is partnering with Japan Tobacco International to run Vapetech, a program aimed at bringing together innovators and data experts to develop technology that improves the experience and health benefits of vaping.

    In a note posted on its website, JTI said this global program would operate from Silicon Valley and launch with a first batch of selected start-ups on March 11, 2019.

    “At Plug and Play we are always interested to support innovation in new industries,” Saeed Amidi, the founder and CEO of Plug and Play was quoted as saying. “We believe vaping has the potential to reduce the health risks from smoking. Our goal is to identify the next generation of products and services, and by connecting them with JTI and others, we will continue to push forward innovation in this industry.”

    The JTI note said that, through a global application and sourcing process, Plug and Play, supported by JTI, would each year select about 20 start-ups who would ‘develop ideas and solutions for a more enhanced vaping experience’. ‘Start-ups with new devices or technology applicable to IoT (Internet of Things), Biometrics, Data, and Lifestyle will enter a three-month program to develop their product and services and have access to investment and corporate partnerships,’ the note said.

    Daniel Torras, JTI’s senior vice president, reduced-risk products, said that with the rapid rise of vaping products, the dynamics of innovation in the industry had changed drastically. “In addition to our own R&D, Vapetech will allow us to explore and develop consumer relevant features for the next generation of products and services,” he said. “It will also extend our network to new sets of entrepreneurs offering disruptive ideas to empower a future of choice in the vaping sector.”

  • Workers in share-out

    Workers in share-out

    Papastratos said yesterday that it would apportion among its workers €1 million in shares in its parent company Philip Morris International, according to a story by Nick Kampouris for The Greek Reporter.

    In a statement, Papastratos said it was rewarding its workers for their exceptional performance last year, which had resulted in what was reported as ‘large profits’.

    Papastratos noted also that its workers had helped to transform its manufacturing unit into an exclusive production center for IQOS products.

    All workers, regardless of their positions, wages or lengths of service, will receive shares worth more than €1,000. Board members will abstain from the share-out, offering their own entitlements to company workers.

    Papastratos, which was named Greece’s top employer for 2017, was said by Kampouris to be well-known in Greece for its exceptional relationship with its workers, who often received extra bonuses, benefits and other perks.

  • JT reducing emissions

    JT reducing emissions

    Japan Tobacco Inc.’s long-term greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction target has been approved as a Science Based Target (SBT) by the Science Based Target initiative (SBTi), according to a note posted on the company’s website today.

    SBTi is an international partnership between CDP (formerly the Carbon Disclosure Project), the UN Global Compact (UNGC), the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) that mobilizes companies to set SBTs in the transition to a low-carbon economy.

    ‘Our approved target, developed in line with the Paris agreement on climate change, is to reduce absolute Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions by 32 percent and absolute Scope 3 Category 1 GHG emissions by 23 percent by 2030,’ the note said. ‘This journey towards a zero-carbon future will be achieved by reducing our energy usage, as well as increasing the proportion of electricity sourced from renewable sources, while constantly looking at innovative ways to achieve and exceed our target.’

    “We are proud that SBTi has approved our target.” Chigusa Ogawa, senior vice president, sustainability management, was quoted as saying. “As a group, we strive to foster a sustainable environment for our business and for future generations. Climate change remains a key environmental challenge for us, as it can have a direct impact on our value chain and the society at large. As a global business, we recognize the opportunity – and the importance – to be part of the solution,” Ogawa added.

    The JTI note said that the company had been strengthening its approach to reducing its environmental impact under the JT Group Long-Term Environment Plan 2020, which had been established in 2014.

    ‘In 2017, the initial target to reduce GHG emission by 20 percent was already achieved and exceeded – three years ahead of schedule,’ the note said. ‘Our new target approved as an SBT demonstrates our ongoing commitment to tackle climate-related issues.

    ‘We are now establishing the JT Group Environment Plan 2030, in which our SBT fits as one of the key targets.

    ‘Further details will be published in the JT Group Sustainability Report FY2018 which will be issued in May 2019.’

  • Covering all the bases

    Covering all the bases

    Philip Morris last night held a UK launch party for its latest range of IQOS heated tobacco and vaping products.

    The launch was held in the basement of the ME on the Strand, London, and the party at the hotel’s Radio Rooftop Bar.

    Participants were given the opportunity of listening to a presentation by Dr. Moira Gilchrist, PhD, vice president of scientific and public communications at Philip Morris International about harm reduction and the part that PMI was playing in it by developing products that were underpinned by robust science and research.

    IQOS products were displayed and there were static presentations explaining, for instance, the timeline of product development from Accord to IQOS, and why it was that health problems stemmed from the inhalation of the products of tobacco combustion. One such presentation was headed, The Smoking Problem.

    In a press note, PM Ltd (UK and Ireland) said that the three new smoke-free IQOS devices were the company’s most advanced to date and had been designed to make it easy for smokers to switch away from cigarettes completely. According to PM Ltd’s MD, Peter Nixon, the new products have been specifically designed to give every one of the UK’s 7.4 million smokers a way to stop “burning tobacco”. “We are confident that our new IQOS range provides the solutions needed to help all UK smokers move away from cigarettes,” he said.

    One of the devices presented at the launch was the IQOS3, which was described as the latest version of the heated tobacco device featuring a longer battery life, faster charging and a more ergonomic design.

    The IQOS MULTI was described as a new, more compact heated tobacco device that had been designed to provide a different experience to PM’s other devices. With IQOS MULTI, consumers could use 10 back-to-back tobacco sticks before needing to charge the device.

    IQOS MESH, for which the UK is its first market, was said to be a premium vaping product that used a replaceable pod containing nicotine liquid. ‘It uses a unique “mesh” rather than the traditional “coil and wick” to offer a more consistent vaping experience,’ PM said. ‘There are seven different flavored pods.’

  • Dynamic change foretold

    Dynamic change foretold

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • HNB scientific workshop

    HNB scientific workshop

    A one-day workshop on heated-tobacco products is due to be hosted by CORESTA (Co-operation Centre for Scientific Research Relative to Tobacco) in Paris, France, on March 26.

    The workshop will discuss a range of issues related to these products and set up a road map for further CORESTA activities in this area.

    A press note announcing the workshop said the interest in new nicotine delivery products had increased significantly during the past decade.

    ‘Recently, among these products, those using heated-tobacco technologies have come to the forefront of discussions within the scientific, health and regulatory communities,’ the note said. ‘Studies have been published, but there are still different scientific opinions, based on different approaches. Therefore, further work remains to be conducted to provide better understanding of all issues, and robust data produced to assist to make science-based decisions in terms of devices, components and product use patterns.

    ‘Regarding heated-tobacco products (HTP), also known as tobacco-heated, heat-not-burn or non-combusted tobacco products, an interest from many CORESTA members and non-members is growing to embrace these new alternatives to conventional cigarettes. This is why CORESTA, six years after a similar situation with electronic cigarettes, which eventually led to the first vaping industry international standard, considered that it should capitalize on its global scientific expertise in helping with the understanding and characterization of these products, in co-operation with all interested and relevant stakeholders.

    ‘After an open-discussion held on the topic during the CORESTA Congress in Kunming, China, October 2018, a one-day workshop will be convened on March 26, 2019, in Paris, France, to discuss a range of issues related to these products and to set up a road map for further CORESTA activities in this regard.’

    Registration is open to all interested parties.

    More information is available on the CORESTA website.