Tag: Kazakhstan

  • KT&G Builds Factory in Kazakhstan

    KT&G Builds Factory in Kazakhstan

    Image: KT&G

    KT&G is building a new factory in Kazakhstan to meet global demand for its overseas business.

    In October 2023, KT&G held a groundbreaking ceremony for the new plant in Almaty and began building a “hybrid production base” for overseas sales on a site of about 200,000 square meters. When the plant is completed in 2025, Kazakhstan will become a production hub for supplying products to Europe, the CIS and the rest of Eurasia.

    In early 2023, KT&G established a sales and manufacturing subsidiary in Kazakhstan to grow its business in Eurasia and has been focusing on establishing a local business foundation. Currently, the company employs more than 150 locally recruited employees, and the completion of the plant is expected to create additional local employment as it establishes a complete local value chain from production to marketing and sales.

    The establishment of KT&G’s new factory in Kazakhstan is part of a growth investment aimed at achieving the company’s vision of becoming a “global top-tier” player. KT&G has announced its goal to increase the proportion of sales from overseas business to more than 50 percent of its total revenue by 2027 through future growth investments.

    As of the third quarter, KT&G’s overseas cigarette sales amounted to 163.2 million pieces, the largest sales volume of the company for the second consecutive quarter.

  • Kazakhstan Urged to Reconsider Policies

    Kazakhstan Urged to Reconsider Policies

    The Coalition of Asia Pacific Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) today called on the government of Kazakhstan to reassess its stance on tobacco harm reduction (THR) products, citing compelling evidence from Japan demonstrating the significant health and economic benefits of embracing safer alternatives to smoking. 

    A recent study published in the journal Healthcare reveals that if 50 percent of smokers in Japan switched from combustible cigarettes to heated tobacco products (HTPs), it could prevent 12 million patient cases and save JPY 454 billion in healthcare costs. This data underscores the immense potential of THR strategies in countries with high smoking rates. 

    Nancy Loucas, the executive coordinator of CAPHRA, stated that the Japanese example clearly illustrates that HTPs can be an effective harm reduction tool in nations where smoking prevalence remains high, and other safer nicotine products are unavailable.

    “Kazakhstan, with its significant gender disparity in smoking rates and tobacco-related health issues, could greatly benefit from adopting a more progressive approach to THR. Kazakhstan’s current policies treat all nicotine products, including less harmful alternatives, the same as traditional cigarettes,” Loucas explains in an e-mailed release. “This approach, coupled with the recent ban on vapes and high taxes on smokeless alternatives, demonstrates a concerning lack of acceptance for harm reduction strategies. 

    “By ignoring the potential of THR products, Kazakhstan is missing a crucial opportunity to save lives,” Loucas added. “Our analysis suggests that embracing harm reduction policies could prevent 165,000 premature deaths in Kazakhstan over the next four decades.  

    The government must reconsider its stance for public health, stated Loucas.  CAPHRA urges Kazakh policymakers to: 

    1. Review and revise current regulations to differentiate between combustible cigarettes and less harmful alternatives. 
    2. Following Japan’s successful model, the introduction of HTPs should be considered as a harm reduction tool. 
    3. Engage with public health experts and THR advocates to develop evidence-based policies. 
    4. Implement a tiered taxation system encouraging smokers to switch to less harmful products. 

    “The time for Kazakhstan to act is now,” Loucas stated. “By embracing tobacco harm reduction, the country can significantly improve public health outcomes, reduce healthcare costs, and potentially narrow the life expectancy gap between men and women. We stand ready to support Kazakhstan in developing and implementing effective THR policies.” 

  • Kazakhstan Mulls Cigar Tax

    Kazakhstan Mulls Cigar Tax

    Photo: Maksym Kapliuk

    Kazakhstan’s Ministry of National Economy wants to introduce excise taxes on high-end cigars and other luxury items, reports The Times of Central Asia.

    The goals of the new taxes are “to equalize the socioeconomic situation of different segments of the population, to increase the nation’s revenue and to regulate consumption of certain goods,” according to the ministry.

    In its proposals, the ministry acknowledged that potential reductions in consumption of the impacted luxury goods, along with the cost of administrating the new taxes, might offset any additional income generated.

    The new amendments are also forecast to harmonize excise on general tobacco. Current legislation already provides for a gradual increase in excise taxes on cigarettes, which are due to reach $30.6 1,000 cigarettes this year.

    The ministry’s document is publicly available for discussion until March 27, with the new tax code expected to be adopted in October of this year.

  • A Mixed Reception

    A Mixed Reception

    Photos courtesy of Vladislav Vorotnikov

    E-cigarettes enjoy booming popularity in the CIS region—but not among lawmakers.

    By Vladislav Vorotnikov

    A meteoric rise in the popularity of vapes in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan is pushing the governments to act. Severe measures up to a complete ban are on the table in many markets, but the looming risks of black market expansion prevent the authorities from hustling moves.

    As of March 1, 2024, selling flavored vapes will be illegal in Russia, according to a draft government decree.

    Among the additives due to be banned are vanilla, spices, ginger, cinnamon and sweeteners along with caffeine, guarana and taurine, which increase energy and mental and physical performance.

    No matter whether the measure will come into force, the end of the anti-vape campaign in Russia is nowhere in sight. In October 2023, a bill altogether banning selling vapes in the country was tabled in the Russian Parliament. 

    The bill was originally prepared two years ago and has recently been resubmitted by lawmakers, Yaroslav Nilov, a member of State Duma, the lower chamber of the Russian Parliament, stated.

    “We realize that the ban means certain lost revenues, but the health of citizens is more important, so we will strive to make the ban real,” Nilov commented.

    Restrictive measures against selling vapes are easily being circumvented by unscrupulous sellers in Russia, the lawmakers said in an explanatory note to the bill, referring to the law prohibiting selling vapes and e-cigarettes to customers below 18 years, which came into force earlier in 2023.

    In addition, the Russian government now struggles to ban selling vapes through the internet. In November 2023, it was disclosed that a Russian regulator seeks to close 250 online stores selling such products. These efforts have gained little traction so far. 

    Russian authorities are not alone in the CIS region in their vaping crackdown. In July 2023, the idea of banning all forms of e-cigarettes was put forward by the Youth Parliament of Belarus, a public organization designed to raise future lawmakers.

    In July 2023, a Kazakhstan government commission hammered out a recommendation to prohibit selling e-cigarettes, liquids and vape flavors, though no concrete timeframe for the measure to come into force has been disclosed yet.

    Again, potential harm to the health of the citizens has been cited as the primary rationale behind the initiative.

    “The harm of vaping is undeniable,” Nurgul Tau, deputy of the Kazakh Majilis, the lower chamber of the Kazakh Parliament, said, emphasizing that the Health Ministry had been advocating the prohibition on selling vapes since 2021.

    Ukraine is the only country in the CIS region where a ban on selling vapes and e-cigarettes has already been put into place.

    The idea of banning vapes has been brewing in the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada, the national Parliament, for the past few years. Retailers and tobacco companies urged the authorities to consider alternative options, including partial restrictions, but the legislators appeared to be adamant about banning vapes.

    A Booming Market

    Public discussions about banning vapes in the post-Soviet area have been spurred by a skyrocketing rise in sales in the past few years.

    In 2022, the Russian market of single-use vapes has nearly tripled, NielsenIQ, an international consultancy, estimated without providing concrete figures. Companies operating in this segment saw their revenues rise by about 350 percent.

    Between 2018 and 2021, the Russian vaping market expanded by a factor of 50, estimated an alliance of participants of the electronic nicotine-delivery systems market. Last year, the sales were nearly RUR250 billion ($2.5 billion).

    The scale of the market boom can be seen with the naked eye. While in 2021, only 7 percent of tobacco stores sold vapes, by May of 2022, this figure reached 35 percent, NielsenIQ said. Another study indicated that at the beginning of 2023, the number of stores selling vapes in Russia was equal to that of conventional tobacco products.

    The picture is similar on the neighboring markets. Since 2020, sales of vapes in Kazakhstan jumped by a factor of 300 times, the Kazakh finance ministry estimated.

    In Ukraine, the state budget collected UAH2 billion ($55.6 million) from the companies selling vapes, calculated Yuri Suptel, head of the Ukrainian Vaping Association. In 2023, this figure was projected to reach UAH5 billion, but the actual figure will be much lower due to the ban that came into force in July.

    Over the past few years, nearly 1 million Ukrainian smokers “migrated” to vapes, so the restrictions will be quite painful for a large number of customers, Suptel estimated.

    Time for the Black Market

    Ukrainian retailers have largely ignored the government ban on vapes imposed in July, local press reported, showing numerous pictures of tobacco stores selling vapes after the restrictions were enacted.

    Since August 2023, the black market of vapes has been flourishing in Ukraine, Suptel said, estimating that smugglers illegally delivering vapes to Ukraine from neighboring countries earn around UAH500 million per month.

    “In the shadow market, it is impossible to ensure compliance with the laws that regulate the sales of cigarettes, electronic devices and other tobacco products. For example, the access of minors to nicotine products is not limited. The National Police of Ukraine must fight this phenomenon. But unfortunately, they simply do not have enough resources,” Suptel admitted.

    “We hope that the government and members of the parliament will think about the absurdity of the ban and make the right decision,” Suptel added.

    The risk that the ban will push the entire vape market underground is believed to be one of the key reasons why Kazakhstan is not rushing to implement the restrictions.

    “I’m sure that our deputies, due to their naivety or bias, will ban vapes eventually. In a year or two, we will come to the point where this ban will have to be lifted,” commented Dmitry Zhukov, executive director of the QazSpirits Ale, a local vaping company.

    It is one thing to ban a product that is difficult to import into the country and challenging to make and entirely another to ban vapes, which “any schoolchild can assemble on his knee,” Zhukov said.

    Currently, Kazakhstan companies selling vapes have no plans to curtail their activities, even if the ban gets a green light. They explained that the demand on the market is not likely to be affected. On the other hand, when the entire market moves underground, there will no longer be a need to pay excise fees, according to Zhukov.

    Russia would lose RUR38 billion per year in tax revenue from a ban on vapes while the black market is going to flourish, reaching RUR500 billion to RUR600 billion in annual sales, calculated Dmitry Vladimirov, head of the Union of Enterprises of the Industry of Nicotine-Containing Products.

    “Significant losses of the Russian budget in such a difficult geopolitical situation, the growth of the black market, and the rising number of deaths due to the use of counterfeit products are just the tip of the iceberg [Russia will face],” Vladimirov stated.

    In the countries that opted to ban e-cigarettes, their illegal sales skyrocketed by a factor of 200 to 300, Vladimirov estimated.

    Russia analysts also pointed out that the black market of vapes will find itself on fertile ground as illegal sales of conventional tobacco products still exist in the country, especially in the provinces remote from Moscow. This business is doing well and even growing despite the government’s efforts to take it down, and there are reasons to believe that the ban will only buttress it.

    Production Perks Up Despite Uncertainty

    While all countries in the region are primarily importing vapes, there are signs that local production is also on the rise.

    “The industry could develop under the balanced control of the state; some operators, for example, planned to start producing such products on the territory of Ukraine, contribute to the economy through exports, help GDP growth [and] create jobs,” Suptel said.

    However, even if the ban is removed now, it will take time for the market players to reconsider their plans, owing to high uncertainty about the legal status of this business, according to him.

    Some capacities for producing e-cigarettes are being established in Russia, though the lion’s share of the sold products still comes from China.

    One local publication wrote about an entrepreneur who managed to earn RUR90 million in one year, investing a relatively small amount of money into the production of vapes. On the other hand, most vape manufacturers prefer to keep a low profile. One possible reason is that some plan to continue operations when the ban is enforced.

  • KT&G Breaks Ground for Kazakhstan Factory

    KT&G Breaks Ground for Kazakhstan Factory

    Photo: KT&G

    KT&G Corp has broken ground in Kazakhstan for its fourth overseas plant as part of its expansion strategy.

    The Korean tobacco firm aims to complete construction by 2025 and export its products to the Eurasian region. The news follows KT&G’s announcement last month that it would build a second factory in Indonesia, with an aim of starting operations in 2026 and exporting products to neighboring countries.

    “The new Kazakhstan factory will serve as a global core production hub covering the Eurasian market and will be a forefront base for realizing the group’s future vision of global top-tier,” said KT&G CEO Baek Bok-in in a statement, referring to the company’s global ambitions.

    The company aims to earn half of its sales from overseas businesses in 2027. It wants to achieve sales of KRW10 trillion ($7.4 billion) in 2027, compared with KRW5.9 trillion in 2022.

    While focusing on the conventional cigarette business, KT&G said it will reinforce its heat-not-burn (HNB) and health functional food product businesses.

    KT&G has exported its HNB products to more than 30 countries since 2020 through a distribution deal with Philip Morris International.

    The company’s cigarette division earns 78 percent of its sales from the conventional cigarette business and 22 percent from the HNB business.

    KT&G has six tobacco  factories—three in South Korea and one each in Russia, Turkey and Indonesia.

  • Expert Condemns Kazakh Vape Ban

    Expert Condemns Kazakh Vape Ban

    Delon Human (Photo: Taco Tuinstra)

    Leading international public health experts have expressed serious concern about Kazakhstan’s imminent ban on vapes as a “backward step” that contradicts the unprecedented success of more progressive countries that are dramatically reducing tobacco’s toll through the use of alternative nicotine products.

    The Kazakh government’s intention to enact the prohibition by Jan. 1, 2024, endangers the lives of the country’s 3.2 million smokers who will be deprived of their best chance to quit their deadly habit, according to the Smoke Free Sweden, a movement highlighting Sweden’s progress in becoming smoke-free.

    “We note with great concern this retrogressive move by the Kazakhstan Ministry of Health, which defies the extraordinary achievements of some countries that have adopted a progressive approach to modern products such as vapes and oral pouches,” said Delon Human, a global health advocate and founder of Smoke Free Sweden, in a statement.

    “Around the world, alternative nicotine products are helping to save millions of lives by giving smokers an escape from combustible cigarettes. They are proven to be at least 95 percent less harmful than cigarettes and the most effective way for smokers to quit.

    “To ban these reduced-risk products will simply condemn many smokers to stick with cigarettes and sentence them to an unnecessarily premature death.”

    Human urged Kazakh authorities to emulate the approach of Sweden, which is on course to drop below a 5 percent tobacco smoking prevalence in the next few months. This is the level at which a country is considered officially smoke-free.

    Sweden is the first EU country to achieve this milestone—17 years ahead of schedule—through its policy of making vapes and pouches available, acceptable and affordable to adult smokers.

    “Quitting smoking like Sweden saves lives,” says Human. “Compared to the rest of Europe, Sweden has 44 percent fewer tobacco-related deaths, a cancer rate that is 41 percent lower, and 38 percent fewer deaths attributable to any cancer.

    “Sweden is leading the way for other nations, such as the United Kingdom where the health service is giving free vape kits to smokers to help them quit. The government is funding the ‘swap to stop’ scheme with the aim of turning the country smoke-free by 2030.

    “Meanwhile, only last month, the largest study of its kind in the United States confirmed the immense value of vapes as cessation aids. Researchers at Hollings Cancer Center in South Carolina found that vapes nudged people towards quitting smoking – even those who had entered their trial saying they had no intention of quitting.

    “Such evidence is compelling and should be ignored no longer. If Kazakh authorities are serious about saving lives, they should be following the science and offering affordable access to vapes, instead of blocking this proven ‘fire escape’ for smokers,” concluded Human.

  • Kazakhstan to Ban Vaping

    Kazakhstan to Ban Vaping

    Photo: udmurd

    Kazakhstan will outlaw the sale and use of vaping devices, reports AKIPress, citing Member of Parliament Amanzhan Zhamalov.

    Lawmakers also decided to introduce an excise tax on “smoking sticks” at 70 percent of the excise tax on cigarettes. It wasn’t immediately clear from the AKIPress article whether “smoking sticks” refers to tobacco-heating sticks or something else.

    Earlier, the country’s national economy minister, Alibek Kuantyrov announced a plan to raise cigarette excise taxes to nearly $30 by 2024.  

    It was also suggested to raise excise taxes on other tobacco products, such as heated-tobacco, to harmonize tobacco product excise within the Eurasian Economic Union. According to the minister, this will require a staged increase in duties.

  • Kazakhstan to Raise Excise on Tobacco

    Kazakhstan to Raise Excise on Tobacco

    Kazakhstan will increase excise taxes on cigarettes and heated-tobacco products next year, reports Kazinform, citing the country’s national economy minister, Alibek Kuantyrov.

    During a session of the Majilis, Kazakhstan’s Lower House of Parliament, Kuantyrov announced that by 2024, cigarette excise taxes should be no lower than €28 ($29.94). 

    It was also suggested to raise excise taxes on other tobacco products, such as heated-tobacco, to harmonize tobacco product excise within the Eurasian Economic Union. According to the minister, this will require a staged increase in duties. 

  • Kazakhstan Strengthens Tobacco Controls

    Kazakhstan Strengthens Tobacco Controls

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    A comprehensive set of tobacco control measures has been adopted after the president of Kazakhstan, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, approved the legislation on July 8, 2020.
     
    Under the new legislation, the definition of tobacco products has been expanded to include all nicotine products, such as e-cigarettes and heated-tobacco products. The law also bans the import, production, sale and distribution of smokeless tobacco products.
     
    The list of smoke-free places has been expanded, now including bus stops, outdoor playgrounds, underground walkways, transit areas and cars with children inside. Using new products in these places is also banned, and waterpipes are not allowed to be used in public; they are only allowed in homes.
     
    Fines have been increased.

    Manufacturers must now disclose information on the content of all nicotine-containing products, and the size of pictorial health warnings has increased. Tobacco products cannot be displayed at point-of-sale, and the purchase age has been raised to 21 years.  

  • Kazakhstan Tightens Tobacco Law

    Kazakhstan Tightens Tobacco Law

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev on July 8 signed into law comprehensive tobacco control measures to protect Kazakhstanis against the health and economic consequences of tobacco consumption.

    The Health Act treats all nicotine products, including e-cigarettes and heated tobacco devices, as tobacco products. Smokeless tobacco products are banned altogether.

    It prohibits point-of-sale displays and expands the list of smoke-free places to outdoor playgrounds, underground walkways, transit areas and cars with children. The legislation also prohibits new products in smoke-free places and increases fines for violators.

    The new law increases the size of pictorial warning labels from 50 to 65 percent of the display areas and raises the legal age to purchase tobacco products from 18 to 21.

    Manufacturers will be required to disclose the contents of all products containing nicotine.