The organizers of the Global Forum on Nicotine say that their fifth annual event, GFN18, will include the first GFN Film Festival.
The festival is being organised in association with Attention Era Media, the makers of ‘A Billion Lives’, which was shown at a previous GFN event.
Aaron Biebert, the director of A Billion Lives, who will curate the festival, said that reversing propaganda and fear tactics would take more than a single movie. “It will take a community of educators, leaders, and influencers who are educated and excited,” he said. “A film festival focused on tobacco harm reduction will make a huge impact by inspiring filmmakers to take up the cause and help get the truth in front of the public. I am delighted to be leading this effort and believe that together we can make a difference.”
The festival will feature films up to 15 minutes long.
The makers of the films chosen for inclusion will be invited to attend GFN18 and the organisers hope to have short Q&A sessions with them following the screenings, which will take place within the conference venue and will be open to everyone attending the conference.
The conference is scheduled to be held at the Marriott Hotel, Warsaw, Poland, on June 14-16.
The festival will take place on June 15 and 16, with each of the entries being eligible for the ‘Best Picture’ award, to be decided by a jury, chaired by Biebert, who will also present the award during the closing session of the GFN.
The winning entry will be shown also during the closing session.
More information about the festival is available at: filmfest@gfn.net.co.
Tag: Poland
Nicotine forum on film
Nicotine forum announced
The organizers of the Global Forum on Nicotine say that their fifth annual event, GFN18, is due to be held at the Marriott Hotel, Warsaw, Poland, on June 14-16.
The theme for the forum is ‘Rethinking Nicotine’.
The program will comprise plenary sessions, symposiums, panel discussions and poster presentations – including video posters.
The program committee is inviting abstracts for oral presentations and posters. The deadline for the submission of oral presentations is February 11, while the deadline for the submission of poster presentations is April 1.
The organizers are making up to three scholarships available for early-career researchers who are chosen to make oral presentations.
The program committee will use selected abstracts to construct themed sessions.
Authors will be informed if their abstracts have been accepted before the posting of the near-final program on April 22.
Once again, the International Symposium on Nicotine Technology (ISoNTech) will run alongside GFN18.
The GFN18 website is at: https://gfn.net.co/welcome.
Smoking poleaxed
Poles, who in the 1990s smoked 100 billion cigarettes a year, now smoke only 40 billion annually, according to a story by Paweł Kononczukthe for Polskie Radio citing the World Health Organization’s Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic 2017.
In addition, the proportion of smokers within Poland’s population has dropped from 42 percent in the 1980s to 24 percent in 2015.
The results of the WHO study were presented at an event in Warsaw on Wednesday.
Talking at the event, the physician, professor Witold Zatoński, said Poland, along with other EU states, was at the forefront of introducing policies aimed at curbing tobacco consumption.
He said that the drop might have been largely attributed to a 1995 law on “the protection of health against the effects of tobacco consumption, then hailed by the WHO as the best such legal act in the world”.
The deputy health Minister Zbigniew Król was quoted as saying that his ministry wanted “cigarettes to be expensive, unappealing and hard to access”.
Meanwhile, the Eurostat statistics agency said in May that Poland remained among the countries with the highest rate of deaths from smoking-related lung cancer in the EU.
A burning question
British American Tobacco is due today to describe at a conference in Warsaw, Poland, how five criteria can be used to establish whether tobacco is being burnt or heated in a tobacco-heating product (THP).
The conference, the Global Forum on Nicotine, is being held at the Marriott Centrum Hotel, Warsaw, on June 15-17.
The main GFN program, which is scheduled for June 16 and 17, will examine the rapidly developing science in relation to nicotine use and the changing landscape, including policy responses and the influence of different stakeholders in this.
Whether tobacco is heated or burnt is important because it determines the chemical composition of the vapor produced. The very high temperatures at which cigarettes burn mean that there are more than 100 chemicals formed that are thought to be associated with the development of smoking-related diseases.
‘THPs are one of several new categories of product being designed as alternatives to conventional cigarettes – electronic cigarettes are a well-known example,’ BAT said in a pre-conference press note.
‘The burning zone in a cigarette can reach temperatures of between 600 and 950̊ºC, whereas in THPs, the temperature is hundreds of degrees lower. It is high enough to release nicotine and flavorings but not so high as to result in the burning of the tobacco and the creation of many of the very high temperature smoke toxicants thought to be involved in the development of the serious diseases associated with smoking. THPs therefore produce emissions that contain fewer toxicants and as a result have the potential to be significantly reduced risk compared to conventional cigarettes.’
BAT said that though various THPs were commercially available, they differed in the way they heated tobacco and in their temperature characteristics. And currently, there was no standard way of assessing whether a product was mainly heating rather than burning tobacco. So, scientists at BAT had developed a five-step approach to comprehensively assess this aspect of a THP.
“To ensure a THP is producing an aerosol by heating rather than burning tobacco, it is important to characterise the way the tobacco is heated,” Dr. Chuan Liu, head of THP science at BAT, was quoted as saying.
“Our five-step approach provides a comprehensive yet practical assessment irrespective of the heating mechanism in the device.”
The five steps are:
Step 1: ‘Measure any physical or chemical changes in the tobacco as it is heated all the way to cigarette combustion temperature to identify the safe temperature window for THP operation. In glo, British American Tobacco’s THP, the maximum heating temperature is set below 245ºC.
Step 2: ‘Establish the maximum temperature the tobacco is heated to and how long it is heated for when the THP is actually used…
Step 3: ‘Analyse the levels of the following combustion products: CO, CO2, NO and NOx produced by the device when heating tobacco. These are key markers for tobacco that is heated to high temperatures or burnt. Their levels should be much lower than those found in the emissions of a reference cigarette.
Step 4: ‘Measure the level of emissions of a range of other known cigarette smoke toxicants potentially produced by the device. For example, some aldehydes are known to be formed by low-temperature decompositions of carbohydrates. Their levels can be used to judge the extent by which we control this low-temperature breakdown.
Step 5: ‘Examine the physical integrity of the tobacco rod after it has been heated in the device, to assess the extent of any degradation from heating to high temperatures or burning. No charring or ash should be formed.’
GFN program complete
The organizers of the Global Forum on Nicotine (GFN) have said that the program for the 2017 event is complete.
The GFN is due to be held at the Marriott Centrum Hotel, Warsaw, Poland, on June 15-17.
The main GFN program, which is scheduled for June 16 and 17, will examine the rapidly developing science in relation to nicotine use and the changing landscape, including policy responses and the influence of different stakeholders in this.
The program will comprise plenary sessions, symposia, panel discussions and poster presentations – including video posters.
June 15 is scheduled to include the Michael Russell oration, and satellite and side meetings, including one for consumers organised by the International Network of Nicotine Consumer Organisations.
It will include, too, the first International Symposium on Nicotine Technology designed to showcase the latest technological advances in alternative nicotine delivery systems, next generation devices and the science behind them (http://isontech.info/).
The program is at: https://gfn.net.co/2017/programme-details.
The speakers and chairpersons are at: https://gfn.net.co/home-2017/bios/.
GFN program nearly complete
The organizers of the Global Forum on Nicotine (GFN) have said that the program for the 2017 event is almost complete.
The GFN is due to be held at the Marriott Centrum Hotel, Warsaw, Poland on June 15-17.
The main GFN program, which is scheduled for June 16 and 17, will examine the rapidly developing science in relation to nicotine use and the changing landscape, including policy responses and the influence of different stakeholders in this.
The program will comprise plenary sessions, symposia, panel discussions and poster presentations – including video posters.
June 15 is scheduled to include the Michael Russell oration, and satellite and side meetings, including one for consumers organised by the International Network of Nicotine Consumer Organisations.
It will include, too, the first International Symposium on Nicotine Technology designed to showcase the latest technological advances in alternative nicotine delivery systems, next generation devices and the science behind them (http://isontech.info/).
The program is at: https://gfn.net.co/2017/programme-details
The speakers and chairpersons are at: https://gfn.net.co/home-2017/bios/
First speakers announced
The organizers of the Global Forum on Nicotine (GFN) have announced at https://gfn.net.co/home-2017/bios the names of the first speakers to have been confirmed for the 2017 event.
The GFN is due to be held at the Marriott Centrum Hotel, Warsaw, Poland on June 15-17.
The main GFN program, which is scheduled for June 16 and 17, will examine the rapidly developing science in relation to nicotine use and the changing landscape, including policy responses and the influence of different stakeholders in this.
The program will comprise plenary sessions, symposia, panel discussions and poster presentations – including video posters.
The organizers say they are still accepting posters – including video posters – to be included in the exhibition area of the conference, with the closing date for abstracts being March 31. Abstracts can be submitted on-line, via the registration system at https://gfn.net.co/2017/abstracts.
June 15 is scheduled to include the Michael Russell oration, and satellite and side meetings, including one for consumers organised by the International Network of Nicotine Consumer Organisations.
It will include, too, the first International Symposium on Nicotine Technology designed to showcase the latest technological advances in alternative nicotine delivery systems, next generation devices and the science behind them (http://isontech.info/).
Details of the GFN 2017 are at: https://gfn.net.co/
Vape Expo Poland dedicated to TPD
From March 4-5, vapor industry professionals will convene in Warsaw at the Vape Expo Poland.
In addition to learning about the latest products and services at the exhibition, they will discuss issues related to the EU’s revised Tobacco Product Directive (TPD2).
Topics covered include:
- The newly regulated market: how regulations affect business, consumers and how companies can reduce the negative impact of laws
- How TPD regulations impact products and how players can speed up innovative processes in their company according to TPD
- How foreign companies can enter the European markets in a cost-effective manner
Polish e-cigarette distributer opens manufacturing plant
ESmoking WORLD, a leading distributor of e-cigarettes throughout the European market, has opened a manufacturing plant that will begin developing liquid nicotine for use in e-cigarettes by the end of April. The Polish company’s investment of approximately 5 million euros led to the construction of a state-of-the-art facility with the capacity to produce 4 million liquid nicotine packages per month.
In addition to manufacturing products for its network of over 900 eSmoking WORLD stores, the new plant will also manufacture nicotine liquids for OEM brands of other European e-cigarette distributors who stop purchasing products from Chinese liquid nicotine suppliers as a result of the implementation of Tobacco Products Directive regulations.
The manufacturing plant is one of the most modern technological plants of its type and includes original technical solutions and quality-control systems designed by a team of Polish experts from the eSmoking Institute in Poznan, which has researched the content of liquid nicotine and aerosols manufactured in e-cigarettes since 2013.
E-cigarettes are currently used by 1.8 million people in Poland, where the company is the largest supplier of the country’s e-cigarettes for the fast-moving consumer goods sales network and convenience stores.