Blog

  • PMI’s Colorado Zyn Factory Producing During Construction

    PMI’s Colorado Zyn Factory Producing During Construction

    Philip Morris International gave the media a look inside its $600 million Zyn nicotine pouch manufacturing plant in Aurora, Colorado, this week. The 150-acre facility, which began construction in late 2024 and is part of PMI’s U.S. smoke-free product expansion, is expected to create 500 jobs when fully operational in 2026. Despite ongoing infrastructure work and significant portions of the main building still under construction, the plant produced its first Zyn products in September 2025, which have already reached the market.

  • Estonian Groups Want Disposable Vapes Banned by 2027

    Estonian Groups Want Disposable Vapes Banned by 2027

    A coalition of 50 organizations and school leaders, led by the Estonian Green Movement, submitted a public appeal to several Estonian government ministries calling for a nationwide ban on disposable e-cigarettes by 2027. The appeal, sent to the Ministries of Social Affairs, Climate, Economic Affairs and Communications, and Justice and Digital Affairs, argues that single-use vapes pose growing risks to youth health, contribute to nicotine addiction, and create significant environmental waste due to discarded batteries and plastics. The coalition also highlighted public backing for the measure, noting that a related initiative gathered more than 2,000 signatures by the end of 2025, and urged authorities to prohibit disposable devices while allowing stricter regulation of reusable alternatives.

  • BAT Extends Chair, Updates Board Movement

    BAT Extends Chair, Updates Board Movement

    British American Tobacco will extend Chair Luc Jobin’s tenure by up to two years, allowing him to remain in the role until the company’s April 2028 annual general meeting (AGM) while the board continues its search for a successor. Jobin, who joined the board in 2017 and became chair in 2021, will continue to stand for annual re-election despite the extension exceeding the UK Corporate Governance Code’s nine-year tenure guideline. The company said the move ensures leadership continuity during its ongoing transformation, following a succession review led by senior independent director Holly Keller Koeppel and the nominations committee. Koeppel will step down after the 2026 AGM, with Karen Guerra set to assume the senior independent director role and oversee the ongoing chair succession process.

  • Greece Busts Major European Illicit Cigarette Ring

    Greece Busts Major European Illicit Cigarette Ring

    Greek police dismantled a highly organized criminal network that had been producing and exporting illegal cigarettes across Europe since 2018, causing state losses exceeding €7 million. In a large-scale operation on January 6, 300 officers raided multiple locations, arresting 26 suspects, including the alleged leaders, while investigating two additional individuals. Authorities said the group operated illegal factories and warehouses, used counterfeit packaging, relied on coded communications and strawmen to conceal identities, and handled finances largely in cash. Police seized 14.4 million cigarettes, 20 tons of processed tobacco, €1.2 million in cash, vehicles, weapons, and electronic equipment. The network reportedly shipped products to several European countries, including Slovakia, and suspects now face charges linked to organized crime, smuggling, money laundering, and arms violations.

  • NSW Increasing Tobacco-Inspector Staff by 62%

    NSW Increasing Tobacco-Inspector Staff by 62%

    New South Wales (Australia) will recruit 30 additional full-time tobacco inspectors to strengthen the state’s Centre for Regulation & Enforcement, expanding the statewide compliance team to 78 staff as authorities intensify efforts against illicit tobacco and vaping products. Since tougher enforcement laws took effect in November 2025, NSW Health and police have closed 66 retailers, including five Sydney Inner West tobacconists last week, while January inspections seized approximately 560,000 cigarettes, 98 kilograms of illicit tobacco, and more than 6,000 illegal vaping products valued at about A$830,000 ($589,000). The government is advancing further legislative measures, including landlord liability provisions and penalties exceeding A$1.5 million ($1.1 million) and seven years’ imprisonment for commercial-scale illicit tobacco offences, as officials warn high federal excise taxes continue to drive demand for illegal products and fuel evolving retail tactics such as QR code and social media-based sales.

  • Bangladesh Professionals Pushing Parliament for Tobacco Control

    Bangladesh Professionals Pushing Parliament for Tobacco Control

    Leaders of several professional and business organizations in Bangladesh are urging the government to pass the Smoking and Tobacco Products Usage (Control) (Amendment) Ordinance 2025 into law during the first session of the 13th National Parliament, arguing that formal legislative approval is critical for effective enforcement. The call was made during a public health meeting in Dhaka organized by Dhaka Ahsania Mission, where speakers described the ordinance as a major step toward reducing tobacco-related illnesses and deaths. Officials emphasized that continued political support from the next elected government will be key to advancing the measure.

    Citing Tobacco Atlas 2025 data, speakers said more than 21.3 million Bangladeshi adults use tobacco, and government representatives said Bangladesh generates about Tk40,000 crore ($3.6 billion) annually in tobacco revenue, but related costs surrounding healthcare, productivity losses, and premature deaths exceed Tk87,000 crore ($7.9 billion) each year.

  • FDA to Host Discussion on PMTAs Feb. 10

    FDA to Host Discussion on PMTAs Feb. 10

    FDA issued a reminder today regarding the Federal Register notice (FRN) roundtable discussion it is hosting tomorrow (February 10) for small tobacco product manufacturers (fewer than 350 employees). The discussion aims to solicit input on premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) submissions for electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) products and will be held from 9 a.m.–5 p.m. ET.

    The topics to be discussed will include certain components of ENDS PMTAs, such as product characterization, manufacturing controls, pharmacological profile (e.g., pharmacokinetic studies), studies of adult benefit (e.g., longitudinal cohort/randomized controlled trial (RCT) studies), and toxicological profile (e.g., estimated lifetime cancer risk).

    FDA has also established a docket for public comment on this roundtable discussion. All electronic comments must be submitted on or before March 12. The regulations.gov electronic filing system will accept comments until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time at the end of March 12.

  • CAPHRA Urges Review of FCTC Following U.S. WHO Exit

    CAPHRA Urges Review of FCTC Following U.S. WHO Exit

    The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) is calling on governments across the region to reassess the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) following the United States’ withdrawal from the WHO and criticism of the agency from New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters. CAPHRA argues that while the FCTC formally recognizes harm reduction under Article 1(d), current policy implementation has not consistently supported reduced-risk alternatives such as vaping and nicotine pouches.

    CAPHRA representatives say restrictions on safer nicotine products risk slowing smoking decline and expanding illicit markets. The group pointed to New Zealand’s smoking rate, which has fallen to 6.8%, as evidence that regulated harm reduction strategies can accelerate public health gains. CAPHRA is also urging greater transparency in FCTC Conference of the Parties proceedings and broader engagement with independent scientists and consumer groups, arguing that future tobacco control policy should be measured by reductions in smoking prevalence and disease outcomes rather than product bans.

  • Universal Appoints Diel as CFO

    Universal Appoints Diel as CFO

    Universal Corporation appointed Steven S. Diel as senior vice president and chief financial officer, effective April 1, succeeding Johan C. Kroner, who will remain with the company as a senior vice president through July 1, to support the transition. Diel, a Universal executive since 2018, brings more than 25 years of experience in finance, corporate development, and strategy, most recently serving as vice president and CFO of Universal Ingredients, and previously leading acquisitions totaling more than $350 million that helped establish the company’s ingredients segment. Chairman, president, and CEO Preston D. Wigner said Diel’s promotion reflects confidence in his financial leadership and strategic execution as Universal seeks to strengthen performance and drive long-term shareholder value.

  • Anti-Tobacco Group Alarmed that PMI, BAT Spending $40M on F1 Sponsorships

    Anti-Tobacco Group Alarmed that PMI, BAT Spending $40M on F1 Sponsorships

    Anti-tobacco advocacy group STOP (Stopping Tobacco Organizations and Products) is increasing scrutiny of nicotine brand marketing in Formula 1, arguing that partnerships between teams and companies linked to tobacco firms risk exposing younger audiences to nicotine products. The watchdog group claims the growing presence of products such as nicotine pouches and other smoke-free alternatives in motorsport sponsorship represents a regulatory gap that allows continued brand visibility despite historic restrictions on tobacco advertising.

    STOP highlighted recent sponsorship activity believed to be a combined $40 million by Philip Morris’ Zyn nicotine pouch products on Ferrari race teams and BAT’s Velo brand appearing in F1 team partnerships. Jorge Alday, director of STOP at Vital Strategies, said the organization is concerned given Formula 1’s expanding and increasingly youthful global fanbase. The group is urging regulators and sports governing bodies to consider tighter oversight of nicotine product marketing in international sporting events, while industry stakeholders maintain that such products fall within existing legal frameworks governing reduced-risk or non-combustible nicotine alternatives.