Tag: COP10

  • Party Time

    Party Time

    Photo: Hanohiki

    The industry will not be present as the FCTC parties debate future tobacco and nicotine policies in Panama this autumn.

    By Taco Tuinstra

    From Nov. 20 to Nov. 25, delegates representing the countries that have signed to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) will gather in Panama City to discuss tobacco and nicotine policies at the 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10). It’s an event that warrants close scrutiny because the decisions taken at the COP tend to have profound implications on the nicotine business and its customers, impacting the future of manufacturers, suppliers and tobacco growers along with stakeholders such as smokers and vapers.

    “COP is a highly influential global policy center for tobacco,” explains Flora Okereke, head of global insights and foresights at BAT. “It covers everything in the tobacco value chain from ‘seed to smoke.’” Even though the forum’s guidelines are just recommendations, many of the guidelines make it into national legislation.

    Major policies, such as plain packaging and flavor restrictions, were floated at the COP before they were adopted by leading markets. The COP also inspired the bans on industry science that have proliferated in recent years—a development that Okereke considers to be even more detrimental to the cause of tobacco harm reduction (THR) than the event’s well-established restrictions on industry engagement.

    In addition to impact at the national level, the COP also holds considerable institutional sway globally. “The FCTC is lodged not under the WHO but under the U.N., which means it has implications for trade, agriculture and finance as well,” notes Derek Yach, a global health expert who was deeply involved in the crafting of the treaty two decades ago. Through its interactions with bodies such as the World Health Organization, the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the World Bank, the COP is able to spread its tobacco control philosophies, which tend to favor prohibition over more progressive approaches.

    All this implies that the COP bears an outsized influence on the future of the nicotine business.

    So, what can the industry expect from COP10? Experts who have been following the preparations expect debates about the “tobacco endgame,” which includes nicotine reduction, retailer quotas and generational tobacco purchasing bans. They also anticipate talks on contents and emissions testing and measurements, filters and ventilation, and pricing and tax increases.

    At press time, documents had been released for discussions about extending advertising/sponsorship restrictions to corporate campaigns and newer media; supporting anti-tobacco litigation; and discouraging industry diversification into pharmaceuticals and other areas. Also on the agenda: a proposal to redefine aerosol from tobacco-heating products as smoke—a move that critics have described as an attempt to rewrite basic scientific principles.

    In addition, the COP delegates will consider recognizing tobacco control as fundamental to the right to health, clearing the way to attack the industry as a violator of human rights and subject it to additional liability. However, they will not discuss the negative impact of such an approach on smokers and tobacco farmers—two highly stigmatized groups. Participants in the Panama event will likely also debate emerging evidence on new products. Worryingly, they may push for e-cigarettes and tobacco-heating products to be regulated like combustible cigarettes, a development that critics say is not based on science and would discourage the THR that has been underway in many countries.

    Rejecting Harm Reduction

    To tobacco harm reduction proponents, the COP’s growing aversion to THR and the potential of new nicotine products is among its most disturbing characteristics. Even though FCTC Article 1(d) identifies harm reduction as a fundamental tobacco control strategy, THR has been given short shrift during the biennial conferences, with delegates pushing increasingly prohibitionist policies with each subsequent gathering.

    That attitude, says Okereke, is particularly unwarranted considering the emergence of reduced-risk alternatives to smoking. While acknowledging that the first port of call should be smoking cessation, she believes that those who do not wish to quit using nicotine deserve access to better alternatives. “Despite years of tobacco control, more than 1 billion people continue to smoke,” says Okereke. “What do we do with those people? Can we at least offer them alternatives to reduce risks? Years ago, there would have been no options. But thanks to technology, smokers now have real alternatives.”

    Yach is bothered by the inability of the COP delegates to engage in the science. “That’s a failure of imagination,” he says, especially when considering how their colleagues in medicine and other areas have embraced the concept of harm reduction. According to Yach, some of the ambassadors who negotiated the FCTC were also involved in the WTO Doha round about AIDS drug pricing at the start of the new millennium. But whereas the WTO approach was all about patents and innovation, the FCTC never mentions those words. “The people negotiating that treaty simply assumed there was no possibility for improvement in tobacco,” he says.

    Despite years of tobacco control, more than 1 billion people continue to smoke. What do we do with those people? Can we at least offer them alternatives to reduce risks? Years ago, there would have been no options. But thanks to technology, smokers now have real alternatives.

    Yach suspects that the resistance to progressive policies is fueled by the fear that THR is an industry trick to sustain sales. But while there may have been legitimate concerns in the early years of THR, he says those should have evaporated as more science became available. “Once we started seeing the big shift out of combustibles and better science showing that the exposure levels [of the new products] were almost unmeasurable, one would expect change.”

    The other factor that has pushed hostility to THR, according to Yach, is the U.S. response to e-cigarettes. “The U.S. approach puts kids—even the theoretical concern about underage vaping—above the real gain to adult smokers who could benefit from new products,” he says. “This ‘kiddification’ policy became the norm internationally once the billionaire philanthropist Michael Bloomberg started pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into extending the campaign across India, Pakistan and other countries. The impact was significant. In 2019, India, one of the world’s largest tobacco markets, banned e-cigarettes, depriving some 100 million combustible cigarette smokers of safer alternatives.

    Bloomberg’s resistance to THR is puzzling given that his charitable foundation funds some of the best harm reduction programs outside of tobacco control, tackling tough issues such as HIV and drug abuse, for example. Reliable sources indicate that the foundation’s unwillingness to extend the harm reduction philosophy to tobacco control has caused divisions even within the organization, providing a sliver of hope that Bloomberg may over time become more amenable to THR.

    Resisting Engagement

    For the time being, however, the COP’s opposition to THR is likely to persist, especially in light of its reluctance to hear dissenting views. Just like the rejection of THR, the ban on industry engagement is not spelled out in the treaty. FCTC Article 5.3 instructs parties to protect public health polices from the tobacco industry’s commercial and other vested interests, but it does not prohibit discussions or engagement outright, which the framers of the treaty realized would be unworkable. “We knew at the time that such a ban was impossible in the case of the Chinese government [which operates the world’s largest tobacco conglomerate] and other countries with state monopolies,” says Yach. Yet the Secretariat took an extreme interpretation of Article 5.3., and it is the nonbinding guidelines—but not the treaty itself—that contain the words “prohibit,” “ban” and “do not involve,” according to him.

    As a result, the FCTC is the only treaty in the UN system where key stakeholders often lack the ability to share their views and insights. Whereas energy companies, including those working in fossil fuel industries, have had ample opportunity to engage during the U.N. Climate Change Conferences and share their insights into how to bring about the desired transition to green energy, the tobacco industry and the rest of the general public will be excluded from having input in Panama, just like at virtually every COP since the creation of the FCTC.

    Such exclusion is detrimental because it means the best available science on tobacco issues will not be taken on board during the COP discussions. Conducting research is expensive—often prohibitively so for noncommercial actors. The industry spends a lot of money on science, according to Okereke. “Nobody else will do that level of research except if they are paid,” she says. But if the industry pays a third party to conduct science, that work will still be treated with suspicion. “Despite industry conducting most science related to new products, COP has historically dismissed our research. Industry is also unable to communicate its findings to consumers because it is prevented from doing so.”

    This situation, says Okereke, has contributed to unhelpful misperceptions, even among specialists. For example, a recent survey commissioned by the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World found that nearly 80 percent of doctors worldwide mistakenly believe that nicotine causes lung cancer, thwarting efforts to help smokers quit with the help of less harmful products.

    Remember the Mandate

    Okereke and Yach believe COP delegates should remember their original mandate—to reduce the death and disease caused by tobacco use. Over the years, the FCTC has expanded its scope from a narrow focus on tobacco to targeting nicotine and the industry as such. This has led to bizarre positions such as opposition to diversification. “On the one hand, they want industry to move out of tobacco—yet when the industry takes steps to do that, they try to block it,” says Okereke. The ultimate objective of the FCTC, she notes, is not to increase the number of laws or to turn the screws on industry but to improve public health.

    In this context, it is telling that some of the countries with the most progressive approaches to new nicotine products have made the greatest progress. Smoking rates in Japan, the United States and Britain, for example, have fallen to record low levels without the prohibitionist measures recommended by the COP. In Japan, the slump in smoking is attributed largely to the success of heat-not-burn products while e-cigarettes are likely to have contributed to the declining popularity of traditional cigarettes in the U.S. Britain’s success in lowering smoking—by the end of 2022, prevalence had fallen to just 13.3 percent—is widely credited to that country’s progressive regulatory approach to vaping.

    By contrast, many early adopters of the FCTC that have been attending the COP for the past 17 years continue to struggle with high smoking rates. With a smoking prevalence of more than 80 percent among adult men, Jordan, which ratified the FCTC in June 2004, has the world’s highest share of male cigarette consumers, for instance.

    The moment you use the phrase ‘appropriate for the protection of public health,’ you run against the rationale given for banning involvement of the industry, which is that there is an irreconcilable difference between the tobacco industry and public health. If something is APPH, then there is no irreconcilable conflict—there is a way to reconcile it through reduced-risk products.”

    Given the prevailing restrictions on industry engagement, THR activists hope that representatives of countries with progressive policies toward new products will share their success stories with other COP delegates, many of whom come from developing countries with particularly high smoking rates and more limited regulatory capacity. The U.K. is particularly well placed in this regard because its government has actively supported moving smokers to less harmful products. Sweden’s success in reducing smoking is also worthy of discussion at COP10; thanks to snus, smoking prevalence in Sweden is poised to dip below the 5 percent that is widely considered to be the hallmark of a smoke-free society.

    The other candidate is the U.S. Having signed the FCTC but not yet ratified it, that country is entitled to intervene during the COP discussions. “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration simply needs to highlight the products it has authorized based on the phrase ‘appropriate for the protection of the public health,’ or APPH,” says Yach. “If something is APPH in the U.S., it must be APPH everywhere. The moment you use that phrase, you run against the rationale given for banning involvement of the industry, which is that there is an irreconcilable difference between the tobacco industry and public health. If something is APPH, then there is no irreconcilable conflict—there is a way to reconcile it through reduced-risk products [RRPs].”

    Yet, while Yach believes that the U.K., the U.S. and other countries with more progressive tobacco control policies have an obligation to speak about their successes, he is not holding his breath. The demonization of the industry runs so deep, he notes, that they may hesitate to boast about the success of their accommodative regulatory frameworks.

    So, deprived of a voice, the nicotine business will be left off of the guest list again as COP delegates descend on Panama this autumn. The worst outcome of this conference, from the industry’s perspective, would be a series of prohibitionist policy recommendations, with delegates urging bans on flavors and disposable e-cigarettes, for example, along with tax structures that would make it unviable to move ahead with RRPs. Without flavors and risk-proportionate taxation, smokers will have fewer incentives to switch to smoking alternatives, and if governments ban RRPs altogether, the only product available will be the riskiest of all—the combustible cigarette.

    A better outcome would be for COP delegates to acknowledge that THR has a role to play in mitigating the health impact of tobacco use and to provide for an unbiased review of evidence related to new products. For example, an independent commission could be convened to review the scientific evidence on RRPs that has come out since the last COP, including the FDA product authorizations and the decisions of the U.K. government and others based on science.

    Though clearly concerned about what might transpire in Panama, Okereke and Yach remain optimistic about the outlook for THR in the longer term. “I believe the story we are telling is compelling,” says Okereke. “The data and the narrative support our positions. In the 10 years since BAT launched its first e-cigarette, we now count over 24 million adult consumers of less risky alternatives to smoking.” While acknowledging concerns about youth uptake and the environment, she is convinced that these issues can be addressed without resorting to prohibition and depriving smokers of such alternatives. Yach, too, sees reason to be hopeful, albeit not immediately. The data, he says, speaks for itself: “In the end—after everything else has been tried—science does win.”

    The millions of smokers looking for less harmful alternatives will be hoping that victory comes sooner than later.

    Welcome to the Party: Meet Your Hosts

    The Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) is an international agreement established to combat the global health problems caused by tobacco use. A framework convention establishes broad commitments and leaves the setting of specific actions and targets either to subsequent more detailed agreements (usually called protocols) or to national legislation.

    The first treaty to be negotiated under the auspices of the World Health Organization, the FCTC defines tobacco control as “a range of supply demand and harm reduction strategies that aim to improve the health of population by eliminating or reducing their consumption of tobacco products and exposure to tobacco smoke.”

    The FCTC was adopted by the World Health Assembly (the highest decision-making body of the WHO) on May 21, 2003, and entered into force on Feb. 27, 2005. To date, 182 countries have signed and ratified the FCTC. Six countries have signed the convention but not ratified it; nine have done neither. This makes the FCTC one of the most widely adopted U.N. treaties.

    The Conference of the Parties is the governing body of the convention. Meeting every two years, it is the venue for discussions about the implementation of the FCTC. All countries, whether they have ratified the treaty or not, can actively participate in discussions. Countries that have ratified the convention are known as “parties.” Countries that have not ratified have observer status and may intervene during the discussions. Delegations typically comprise health officials, although other domestic departmental interests along with nongovernmental organizations and subject specialists might also attend. Past COPs have taken place in Geneva, Durban and Seoul, among other cities. The 2021 gathering took place virtually due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The FCTC Secretariat supports and implements the business of the COP between meetings. While in theory, this body simply administers the COP, it plays a significant role in determining the agenda of each meeting.

    The above descriptions are based on a COP10 briefing paper published by The Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction, which is available in multiple languages. The full text of the FCTC is here.

  • Brazilian Stakeholders Speak Up for Tobacco

    Brazilian Stakeholders Speak Up for Tobacco

    Photo: SindiTabaco

    Industry representatives stressed the importance of considering tobacco growers viewpoints in the tenth Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which is scheduled to take place Nov. 20-25 in Panama City.

    During a panel discussion at the Expointer 2023 agricultural and livestock exposition in Esteio, Rio Grande do Sul, which concluded Sept 3, experts highlighted the economic significance of the tobacco industry to Brazil in general and the country’s southern provinces in particular.

    “We have almost 600,000 people living directly from the crop,” said Marcilio Drescher, president  of the Brazilian Tobacco Growers Association, Afubra, according to a SindiFumo report.

    “On average, 51 percent of our income comes from tobacco and is supplemented by diversification. The average property is 10.5 hectares. Farmers support their families on this small area of land and use an average of just 3.29 hectares for tobacco. A small area under tobacco provides an excellent income combined with diversification. In the last harvest, the farmer’s gross income reached BRL88,000 [$17,859] per capita per family, on average, and there’s also the income from diversification,” he said.

    The topic of diversification is likely to feature prominently during the COP discussion, given that the FCTC encourages countries to move tobacco farmers into other crops. While supporting agricultural diversification, participants in the Expointer panel discussion lamented the exclusion from the discussions of those most impacted by COP decisions. “We cannot have a discussion on producer diversification without involving the primary stakeholders,” said one panelist.

    Rio Grande do Sul’s secretary for economic development, Ernani Polo, stressed his government’s commitment to protecting the tobacco sector.  “We know that the industries and the sector are working hard to diversify, but tobacco production is still what keeps producers in the countryside,” he said.

    The event was also attended by Iro Schunke, president of the Interstate Tobacco Industry Union; Vinicius Pegoraro, the president of the Association of Tobacco Producing Municipalities; Giuseppe Lobo, executive manager of the Brazilian Tobacco Industry Association; and Gualter Batista Júnior, the president of the Federation of Tobacco Industry Workers and the Santa Cruz do Sul and Region Tobacco and Food Industry Workers Union.

  • Eyes on the Ball

    Eyes on the Ball

    Image: Maksym Yemelyanov

    Senior officials should approach COP10 with skepticism but not cynicism, with clarity about their national goals and with some tough questions about trade-offs, unintended consequences and evidence.

    By Clive Bates

    The tenth session of the Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) will take place in Panama from Nov. 20–25, 2023. Hundreds of representatives of the 182 parties and further hundreds of observers will descend on Panama to advance the global accord on tobacco control.

    But how should an official government delegate prepare for and approach the meeting? As a former U.K. senior civil servant, I would like to offer some humble advice.

    First, delegates should be clear on their national public health and tobacco policy goals. Governments could set a wide range of objectives: to reduce disease and death, reduce smoking, reduce tobacco use, prevent addiction, achieve a nicotine-free society, focus exclusively on youth prevention, protect nonsmokers or even destroy the tobacco industry.

    Many delegates will be tempted to say, “All of the above.” That might have worked when the FCTC text was finalized in 2003, but it definitely does not work today. The reason is that there are now very significant trade-offs between these goals. For example, an effort to eliminate nicotine may mean fewer smokers switch to lower risk nicotine products, causing smoking to persist for longer and the burden of disease and death to be higher.

    An exclusive focus on youth may mean considerable additional harm to adults given that adults who smoke are at the most immediate risk of serious disease and premature death. A delegate should arrive at the COP with a strong sense of what they want the FCTC to achieve. I believe the proper public health priority should be to reduce disease and death as deeply and rapidly as possible. Setting any other goal implies that a greater toll of disease and death would be justifiable to meet some other objective. The FCTC and COP should focus on making rapid health and welfare gains, especially among disadvantaged populations—every other goal should be subordinate to that one.

    Second, delegates should approach the COP, the FCTC and the World Health Organization with considerable skepticism. Constructive skepticism will be the norm for many experienced officials, but the WHO does not welcome or expect this, especially from delegates from low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). The WHO expects deference and to be regarded as an authority.

    However, the WHO has not earned and does not deserve the unqualified trust of delegates from its member states. Let me give three reasons why delegates should be skeptical. One: The WHO cannot be trusted to make reliable, evidence-based policy recommendations. For example, the WHO promotes the prohibition of e-cigarettes and heated-tobacco products in situations where far more dangerous smoked tobacco products are freely available and widely consumed. It promotes prohibition without evidence that it will benefit public health, without concern that it will lead to more smoking and without any apparent grasp of the likelihood of illicit trade taking over from a law-abiding supply chain. Two: The WHO cannot be trusted to tell the truth about tobacco and nicotine products. The WHO’s fact sheet on e-cigarettes is full of errors and misinformation, and the agency is unwilling to correct the record or take a balanced view. Three: The WHO is not independent but financially and institutionally compromised by funding from special interest groups. The recently published WHO Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic 2023, is a good example. The acknowledgements on page xvii show the report was funded by the private foundation of an American billionaire and written with the assistance of many activists funded by the same foundation. Michael Bloomberg’s foundation is a substantial funder of the WHO, and  Bloomberg has been appointed as a WHO Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable Diseases. Delegates should carefully consider this funding and its influence on the WHO’s approach. Bloomberg’s policy priorities may differ from those of parties to the FCTC.

    Third, recognize that the so-called civil society representatives with observer status at the COP are not necessarily neutral guardians of the public interest. They are carefully selected activists, chosen for their allegiance to the WHO and almost always funded by foreign interests. Unlike other conventions, such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the FCTC is highly restrictive on which nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) are permitted as observers to the COP. Only 26 NGOs are currently accredited, and participating NGOs must be approved by the COP, provide evidence that they support the FCTC and show that they are working toward its implementation. A single NGO, now known as the Global Alliance for Tobacco Control, acts as an umbrella for smaller NGOs but only if they meet its membership criteria. The Secretariat assesses their suitability and reports to the COP.

    This severe filter on who is eligible to participate has the effect and likely the intention of excluding any critics or skeptics or even diverse views of how to achieve public health goals through tobacco policy. The selective engagement of observers and NGOs creates an echo chamber and a significant bubble of groupthink in the COP. Through pressure and public shaming, the observers attempt to punish delegates who question orthodoxy or take a more pragmatic approach to the issues under discussion. Experienced diplomats will know they are not in Panama to please unrepresentative, unaccountable, opaquely funded interest groups that are often little more than obedient mouthpieces for foreign donors.

    Fourth, take a hard look at the FCTC policy proposals under discussion at COP10. Through the advanced publication of COP documents, it is possible to see the intent of the WHO and the FCTC Secretariat reflected in the COP documents. Since it was finalized 20 years ago, the FCTC has drifted far from its original purpose: to contain and reduce the health and welfare harms primarily arising from smoking. The 2023 COP10 documents show that much of its energy is now devoted to fighting “harm reduction.” This is a legitimate public health strategy, aiming to capitalize on the rise of much safer ways to use nicotine than cigarette smoking, aiming to dramatically reduce the 8 million deaths annually attributable to smoking.

    The problem with opposing harm reduction is that it is likely to cause harm increase. Hostile strategies for novel and emerging products are evident in the documentation. For example, an anonymously authored paper by the WHO for COP10 suggests three main strategies are in use: (i) falsely denying any health or reduced-risk benefits; (ii) treating low-risk products in the same way as high-risk products for the purposes of regulation; and (iii) positioning these products as no more than a tobacco industry survival strategy while ignoring the fact that such products have been deemed appropriate for the protection of public health by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and that command considerable support in the public health community. Other documents reveal underhand tactics. For example, in a paper on definitions, the Secretariat tries to argue that the aerosols from vaping products should be classified as “smoke,” a scientifically baseless claim. But the purpose of this maneuver is to apply provisions in the FCTC that relate to “smoke” and “smoking” to products that do not involve combustion and are smoke-free. The problem with this approach is that, in practice, it will function to protect the cigarette trade from competition from much safer alternatives, implicitly promote smoking and cause more disease and death.

    Fifth, ask the tough questions. As the physicist Richard Feynman said, “I would rather have questions that can’t be answered than answers that can’t be questioned.” That is a good way for delegates to approach COP10. Government officials should not be expected to have all the answers, but they should have the best questions. In the tobacco control field, four questions will help guide any delegate through the policy discussion. One: Who disagrees with this and why? Much of the research and evidence in this field is contested among independent experts. It is not just in dispute between the WHO and the tobacco industry. Delegates should be aware of and insist on seeing all sides of the debate. Two: What are the trade-offs? Are the needs of adult smokers being ignored? Have they considered the implications of anti-vaping measures on young people who would otherwise smoke? Three: What are the plausible unintended consequences? Will strict policies on vaping lead to increased smoking, the development of black markets or consumers starting to make their own do-it-yourself products? Four: Where is the evidence? The original idea of the FCTC was to help all countries adopt evidence-based tobacco policies that had been tried and tested. Now the WHO and the Secretariat want to use Article 2.1 of the FCTC to promote untried measures for which there is no supporting evidence.

    I hope delegates find the COP10 meeting fruitful, but constructive skepticism from senior delegates will be healthy in the longer term and help to restore the FCTC’s credibility.

  • CAPHRA Reports on FCTC Harm Reduction

    CAPHRA Reports on FCTC Harm Reduction

    Photo: Maren Winter

    The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) has released its Shadow Report on the (NON)-Implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) Article 1 (d) on Harm Reduction Strategies. The report is now available to policymakers, regulators in member states and FCTC officials. 

    The Shadow Report emphasizes the importance of consumer participation in policy making and highlights the benefits of tobacco harm reduction alternatives, including vaping.  

    “Tobacco harm reduction products have been shown to serve as a method of smoking cessation and as an alternative for smokers who are unable or unwilling to quit smoking altogether,” said CAPHRA Executive Coordinator Nancy Loucas.

    “The WHO [World Health Organization] FCTC is meant to be an evidence-based treaty that reaffirms the right of all people to the highest standard of health. However, the current tobacco control measures have extensively promoted the abstinence-only approach, which has contributed to smokers’ inability to make informed choices about safer nicotine products,” said Loucas. 

    The CAPHRA’s Shadow Report calls for a more compassionate, people-centered, choice-focused and rights-based approach to tobacco control. By involving consumers in the development of healthcare policy and research, clinical practice guidelines and patient information material, the quality of health information and health outcomes for those using tobacco harm reduction alternatives can be improved, according to the organization.

  • Activists Urge COP10 Consumer Participation

    Activists Urge COP10 Consumer Participation

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Consumer advocates are calling for the next New Zealand government to support greater consumer advocacy participation in the 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in Panama.  

    “The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control has contributed to some progress in the implementation of tobacco control measures, but they need to provide honest, risk-proportionate communication and regulatory recommendations for Tobacco Harm Reduction [THR] products,” says Nancy Loucas, executive coordinator of the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA). 

    “While not perfect, these THR products can be a less harmful alternative to smoking and can help smokers quit. It is critical that smokers have access to accurate information about these products and that regulations are proportionate to their risks,” says Loucas. 

    The WHO FCTC should stop denying smokers, vapers and other tobacco users of their right to have a meaningful participation and inclusion in the formulation of policies that hugely impact them.

    “The WHO FCTC should stop denying smokers, vapers and other tobacco users of their right to have a meaningful participation and inclusion in the formulation of policies that hugely impact them.”  

    CAPHRA is calling on the New Zealand government and next minister of health to ask all member states who will be attending COP10 to reject the prohibitionist proposals contained in COP10 provisional agenda items 6.1 to 6.4 that the organization insists will just further contribute to millions more of unnecessary deaths from smoking. 

    “New Zealand should prioritize science-based inclusive policy making, including at the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. It is essential that policy making is based on the best available evidence and that all stakeholders—including consumer advocates are included in the decision-making process,” said Loucas.

  • Brazil Ag Minister Asked for Support Prior to COP

    Brazil Ag Minister Asked for Support Prior to COP

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Tobacco supply chain representatives met with the Brazilian minister of agriculture, Carlos Favaro, on July 12, to ask his support ahead of the upcoming 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC).

    “Brazil is the top exporter of tobacco worldwide and has occupied this position for 30 years now and is the second largest producer,” said Iro Schunke, president of the Interstate Tobacco Industry Union (SindiTabaco), in a statement.

    “For this leadership role, Brazil should be a protagonist in defending a crop that contributes decisively to the socioeconomic progress of several cities, especially in the south region of the country. Historically, the Ministry of Agriculture has been an ally of the productive sector within this context because it has a good grasp of the impacts of the directives coming from the FCTC could have on the thousands of people who derive their livelihood from this crop, which is processed and exported. This is the stance we again expect from the ministry.”

    Brazil should be a protagonist in defending a crop that contributes decisively to the socioeconomic progress.

    The meeting was also attended by Benicio Albano Werner, the president of the Tobacco Growers’ Association of Brazil (Afubra); Giuseppe Lobo, executive director of the Brazilian Tobacco Industry Association (Abifumo); Guido Hoff, executive director of the Association of the Tobacco Growing Municipalities (AmproTabaco); Carlos Joel da Silva, president of FETAG-RS; Romeu Schneider, president of the Tobacco Sectoral Chamber; and Helena Hermany, mayor of Santa Cruz do Sul. 

    COP10 is scheduled to take place in November in Panama.

  • WHO Releases Provisional Agendas

    WHO Releases Provisional Agendas

    Photo: Alexey Novikov

    The World Health Organization has released its provisional agendas for the 10th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and the third session of the Meeting of the Parties to the Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products (MOP3), the FCTC announced on its website.

    Held in Panama, COP10 will take place Nov. 20-25 and MOP3 will take place Nov. 27-30.

    The provisional COP10 agenda is here and the provisional MOP3 agenda is here. Participants in COP10 can register here and participants in MOP3 can register here.

    Guidance on registration is also available on the FCTC website.

    The FCTC is the first international treaty negotiated under the auspices of the WHO. It was adopted by the World Health Assembly on May 21, 2003, and entered into force on Feb. 27, 2005.

    The Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products is the first protocol to the FCTC, and a new international treaty in its own right. The Protocol builds upon and complements Article 15 of the FCTC, which addresses means of countering illicit trade in tobacco products. It was adopted by consensus on Nov. 12, 2012, at the fifth session of the Conference of the Parties to the FCTC in Seoul and entered into force on Sept. 25, 2018. The Protocol currently includes 67 Parties.

  • Brazilian Lawmakers Debate COP10

    Brazilian Lawmakers Debate COP10

    Photo: SindiTabaco

    Brazil’s House of Representatives held a public hearing June 15 to clarify the country’s position in the upcoming conference of the parties to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which is scheduled to take place in Panama in November (COP10).

    The debate had been requested by federal deputy Alceu Moreira, who lamented the degree of “injustice, disinformation and ideologically oriented political correctness” he claimed to have witnessed in the runup to the conference.

    “We produce a licit crop; we are not committing a crime,” said Moreira. “We are proud of engaging in constructive debates with the aim to protect a licit crop and we refuse to be reprimanded for growing tobacco.”

    As one of the world’s largest exporters of leaf tobacco, Brazil could be heavily impacted by the decisions made at COP10. In the most recent season, the southern region of Brazil alone produced 560 million kg of tobacco, generating BRL9.5 billion ($1.98 billion) for 128,000 farm families.

    The public hearing was attended by representatives of the ministry of foreign affairs, the ministry of agriculture and livestock, and the ministry of agrarian development and family farming. The ministry of health declined to take part, saying that the debate was premature, given that the WHO had yet to publish an agenda for COP10.

    The tobacco industry was represented by the tobacco growers association Afubra and the interstate tobacco industry union SindiTabaco, among other organizations.

    SindiTabaco President Iro Schünke lamented the lack of transparency in the FCTC meetings. “The Framework Convention on Tobacco Control is the worst dictatorship I know, where the real interested parties are not allowed to take part in the debates,” he said.

    The tobacco industry, said Schünke, produces a licit crop that generates income and jobs for millions of Brazilians and is committed to sustainable production. “My intervention is to discover what stance the Brazilian delegation will adopt at the upcoming COP 10 meeting and warn about the consequences from a poorly conducted positioning at the COP,” he said in a statement.

  • KAC Explains COP

    KAC Explains COP

    Gerry Stimson | Photo courtesy of GNF

    Knowledge Action Change (KAC) has published a briefing to help policymakers, health officials and consumers better understand the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). The 10th edition of this event, which normally takes place every two years, is scheduled for November in Panama.

    While decisions made at the conference are likely to significantly impact tobacco companies and their customers, industry representatives and organizations advocating for access to safer nicotine products have traditionally been barred from attending the event.

    As a result, tobacco harm reduction has been getting short rift at COP meetings despite the fact that the concept is an integral part of the FCTC.

    “Harm reduction is explicitly named as one of three tobacco control strategies in the opening lines of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, but at present, the indications are that COP10 is unlikely to result in any decisions that support consumer access to safer nicotine products,” said KAC Director Gerry Stimson in a statement.

    “Parties to the FCTC must seize the opportunity in Panama to consider evidence from countries where tobacco harm reduction is saving lives, including the U.K., New Zealand, Sweden, Norway and Japan—and ask why the WHO and its influential philanthropic funders are refusing to do the same.

    “With no media present, FCTC COP meetings are shrouded in a secrecy more akin to a U.N. Security Council meeting—and in direct contrast to other COP meetings, for example those on climate change. This briefing paper gives policymakers, health officials and consumers more insight into the processes of COP10 and the opportunity to engage more fully prior to and during the event in Panama,” said Stimson

  • COP Delegations Urged to Include Consumers

    COP Delegations Urged to Include Consumers

    Photo: Oleg

    Country delegations to the 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) should include at least one consumer of safer nicotine products, according to the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA).

    In a letter to their respective countries’ FCTC delegations, CAPHRA member organizations stressed the importance of listening to consumers. “Consumers are an untapped experience and knowledge base who are not represented inclusively in the FCTC process,” the letter states. “Delegates to COP10 should be representing the rights and aspirations of the citizens.”

    CAPHRA insists that adults have the right to make choices that help them avoid adverse health outcomes, and people who smoke have the right to access less harmful nicotine products as alternatives to combustible and unsafe tobacco. What’s more, they have the right to participate in the policymaking process that directly impacts their right to health and well-being, the letter notes.

    CAPHRA Executive Director Nancy Loucas said that exclusion of consumer voices has contributed to misinformation, disinformation and failures of tobacco control policy.

    “Millions have successfully used vaping to move away from combustibles and unsafe oral nicotine products, yet the FCTC looks set to bury its head in the sand again at COP10. CAPHRA believes visiting delegations must include a consumer voice to give at least some balance to all the misinformation,” says Loucas.

    COP10 will be held in Panama in November.