Tag: Americas

  • Illicit Cigarette Trade Surges in Latin America and Canada

    Illicit Cigarette Trade Surges in Latin America and Canada

    Illicit cigarettes accounted for 31.9% of total consumption across Latin America and Canada in 2025 — equivalent to 77 billion sticks — resulting in an estimated $8.5 billion in lost tax revenues, according to a report released by Philip Morris Products S.A. The study, conducted by KPMG LLP, examined the Region of the Americas (excluding the United States) and found that the region now has the highest global incidence of illicit tobacco, driven by steep tax increases and regulatory pressures that have pushed consumers toward cheaper illegal products.

    The findings highlight growing fiscal, public health, and enforcement challenges, with markets such as Brazil, Panama, and Ecuador particularly affected, underscoring calls for more balanced regulation and stronger anti-illicit trade measures. Brazil has the region’s largest illicit market with 41.8 billion illicit cigarettes, while illicit cigarettes make up 89% of Panama’s market and 84% of Ecuador’s.

  • ITGA Announces Annual Meeting

    ITGA Announces Annual Meeting

    Tobacco-producing countries from North, Central, and South America have been invited to participate in the International Tobacco Growers’ Association (ITGA) “Americas Regional Meeting on April 24 in Jujuy, Argentina

    The ITGA is convening stakeholders from the tobacco sector across the Americas to address key issues currently impacting the industry. This year’s discussions will place particular emphasis on the increasing regulatory pressure from the World Health Organization (WHO), driven by its Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which will host its Eleventh Conference of the Parties (COP11) this coming November.

    Brazil—currently the world’s largest exporter of tobacco and the second-largest producer after China—has taken one of the strongest opposing stances in the context of these WHO negotiations. The Brazilian Tobacco Growers’ Association (Afubra) will be in attendance to advocate for the socio-economic importance of tobacco in the regions where it is cultivated and to showcase initiatives that promote family farming both within and beyond the tobacco sector.

    “We must support our Brazilian brothers in defending the sector because it affects us all and must be seen as a joint struggle,” said José Aranda, president of the ITGA.