Tag: Switzerland

  • PMI to host results webcast

    PMI to host results webcast

    Philip Morris International Inc. is due to host a live audio webcast at www.pmi.com/2018Q2earnings from 09.00 Eastern Time on July 19 to discuss its 2018 second-quarter results, which will be issued about 07.00 on the same day.
    During the webcast, which will be in a listen-only mode, CFO Martin King will discuss the results and answer questions from the investment community and news media.
    The audio webcast may be accessed also on iOS or Android devices by downloading PMI’s free Investor Relations Mobile Application at www.pmi.com/irapp.
    An archived copy of the webcast will be available until 17.00 on August 17 at www.pmi.com/2018Q2earnings.
    Slides and the script will be available, also at www.pmi.com/2018Q2earnings.

  • Clearing the smoke

    Clearing the smoke

    Philip Morris International says it has taken another step towards a smoke-free future by entering a strategic collaboration with Parallax, a Canadian-based start-up.
    ‘The agreement focuses on advancing the development and commercialization of an effective nicotine-delivery system that leverages the most advanced technologies in pulmonary medicine,’ PMI said in a note posted on its website.
    ‘The co-founders of Parallax, Drs. Noe Zamel and Arthur Slutsky, are Canadian leaders in pulmonary research and medicine, with global reputations and more than 750 peer-reviewed publications between them. For years, they have been firm believers in tobacco harm reduction: the policy of providing safer alternatives to people who smoke as a complement to measures meant to encourage quitting and discourage people from starting to smoke.
    ‘Since its founding, Parallax has assembled a world-class team of experts in formulation, device design, pharmaceutical quality manufacturing, product research and consumer insights.’
    Prof. Manuel Peitsch, PMI’s chief scientific officer, said that science and technology would be essential to a future where all men and women who smoked switched to better alternatives. “Our collaboration with Parallax, founded by world-renowned experts in pulmonary research and technology, is another step forward and will give us access to innovative technologies and expertise.”
    Meanwhile, Zamel and Slutsky were quoted as saying: “As physicians and co-founders of Parallax, we believe that to save lives requires technology, innovation, and a paradigm shift in the mainstreaming of the concept of harm reduction”.
    And Steven Ellis, Parallax’s CEO, was quoted as saying: “Our team couldn’t be more excited about this next step in our journey – working with the global leader in smoke-free innovation and collaborating with its scientific team in fulfilling our joint mission of replacing what we all know is the most harmful delivery system for nicotine – the cigarette – with innovative alternatives that clearly move smokers to a better place in the harm reduction continuum”.

  • Smoke-free simulcasting

    Smoke-free simulcasting

    Philip Morris International yesterday issued a call to action for the creative, media and communications communities to embrace its ongoing commitment to creating a smoke-free world.
    ‘As part of this initiative, PMI will offer smoke-free alternatives wherever we can, including heated tobacco products and e-cigarettes, to current smokers in the industry who would otherwise continue to smoke,’ the company said in a press note.
    The initiative was announced during a keynote speech at the PMI Science Lounge at The Cannes Festival of Creativity, where senior vice president of communications Marian Salzman said: “We are asking the creative community to join us in raising awareness of the potential of science, technology and innovation for those who smoke and the people around them”.
    PMI described the move as being part of its vision ‘to lead the charge towards greater innovation and technology in the tobacco industry, all of which is backed by science’.
    Agencies interested in joining the movement can contact Marian Salzman at marian.salzman@pmi.com.
    “People who smoke deserve information about better alternatives,” said COO Jacek Olczak (pictured). “The media industry can play an important role in making this happen, including by championing this initiative.
    “Quitting tobacco and nicotine remains the best option for smokers, but for those who don’t, science-based non-combustible alternatives are a better choice than continuing to use cigarettes.”
    Olczak said PMI wanted a world where all people who would otherwise continue to smoke instead switched to less harmful alternatives. “We started with a bold statement in Cannes: we are looking to create a world where all these smokers switch to better alternatives,” he said. “Now it’s time to make sure people know we are serious. And now, we are following up with concrete actions.”
    The press note said that the Emakina Group, an independent group of communication agencies in Europe, had been the first agency network to declare its commitment to a smoke-free future by pledging support to the initiative across its 13 offices. “A smoke-free future for the whole company? Challenge accepted,” said Brice Le Blévennec, CEO, Emakina Group. “And you know what? Let’s start now!”
    PMI says it is developing and assessing a range of smoke-free alternatives to cigarettes including heated tobacco products, e-cigarettes, and other innovative technologies. ‘The company is conducting extensive research to examine the risk reduction potential of the products compared to continued smoking,’ it said. ‘All evidence to date indicates that PMI’s smoke-free alternatives are a better choice for smokers than cigarettes.’

  • More evidence on IQOS

    More evidence on IQOS

    Philip Morris International announced today the ‘positive results from a new clinical study on IQOS, the company’s most advanced smoke-free product’.
    ‘The Exposure Response Study (ERS) measured the biological response of people who switch to IQOS for six months compared with continued smoking,’ the company said in a note posted on its website.
    ‘The study met its primary objective, demonstrating that after six months, eight measures of biological response (the primary clinical risk endpoints) improved in those who switched to IQOS.
    ‘PMI’s Scientific Assessment Program has rigorously tested IQOS over more than seven years and supports that switching to our most advanced smoke-free product is likely to present less risk of harm than continuing to use cigarettes. ‘Numerous aerosol chemistry and physics measurements demonstrate that IQOS aerosol contains an average of 90-95 percent lower levels of harmful constituents. Our results support that these reduced emissions translate to reduced toxicity in the laboratory and to reduced exposure in clinical studies.
    ‘The ERS contributes an important new facet to PMI’s research: it begins to explore the impact of these promising results by measuring the biological response of people who switch to IQOS compared with those who continue to smoke.’
    “These results are very encouraging,” said Frank Luedicke, PMI’s chief medical officer. “We believe this study on IQOS is the first ever clinical study of this magnitude to directly assess the risk-reduction potential of a smoke-free product in people who switch to it.
    “Everything we’ve seen, including these new results, continues to point in the direction of risk reduction.
    “We are sharing the results with the scientific community at multiple conferences over the next few months and we look forward to their feedback.”
    PMI said that on June 8 it had submitted the ERS results to the US Food and Drug Administration to add to the extensive body of evidence already presented to the agency in support of PMI’s pending application for authorization of IQOS as a modified risk tobacco product.
    ‘FDA is in the process of reviewing both PMI’s modified risk tobacco product and our premarket tobacco applications, but has not yet reached conclusion,’ it said.

  • PMI issues research update

    PMI issues research update

    Philip Morris International yesterday published its latest Scientific Update for Smoke-Free Products, a regular publication on its research efforts to develop and assess a range of smoke-free alternatives to cigarettes.
    ‘We are focusing this issue on the growing body of independent research on our electrically heated tobacco product (EHTP, marketed as IQOS), the most advanced smoke-free alternative in our portfolio,’ according to a press note posted on the company’s website.
    ‘The covered research comprises independent, peer-reviewed publications on smoke-free products that focus on EHTP, and also includes four recent government reports from the UK, the US, Germany, and the Netherlands.’
    Other sections are said to include an update on the assessment of each product in PMI’s smoke-free portfolio, recent R&D milestones and a compendium of the company’s peer-reviewed publications on its smoke-free products this year.
    “We are happy to see growing interest in studying our smoke-free products and that the general trend among independent results is in line with our own research,” said Prof. Manuel Peitsch, PMI’s chief scientific officer.
    “Independent research on our electronically heated tobacco product, ETHP, demonstrates significant improvements relative to cigarettes, and is crucial to our efforts to change the lives of millions of smokers around the world.”
    PMI said its extensive research and assessment program was inspired by the well-recognized practices of the pharmaceutical industry and in line with the draft guidance of the US Food and Drug Administration for Modified Risk Tobacco Product (MRTP) Applications.

  • World No Smoking Days

    World No Smoking Days

    Philip Morris International is marking World No Tobacco Day, May 31, with a call to recognize it as ‘World No Smoking Day’.
    PMI said in a note posted on its website that it was publishing informational advertisements highlighting that people who smoke deserve the opportunity to learn about smoke-free alternatives to cigarettes.
    ‘It is clear that despite the well-known health risks associated with smoking, many people continue to smoke,’ it said. ‘The World Health Organization (WHO) predicts that there will be more than one billion people who smoke in 2025, about the same number as today.
    ‘Their best choice would be to quit – but many don’t. It makes sense that these men and women should have access to and information about less-harmful alternatives to cigarettes.
    ‘Why would anyone deny them this opportunity?’
    PMI said it was calling for an additional, bold approach to public health.
    “For people who will otherwise continue to smoke, WHO is in the perfect position to drive switching from cigarettes to sensible alternatives,” said André Calantzopoulos, PMI’s CEO.
    “A policy that informs people about those alternatives – in essence, a World No Smoking Day – would reduce smoking prevalence to a far greater extent and at a much faster rate than the existing suite of tobacco-control measures alone.
    “People who smoke deserve a sensible plan that takes full account of better alternatives to cigarettes.
    “For our part, we’re determined to deliver a smoke-free future through innovations that stand up to scientific scrutiny and that meet consumer needs.”
    PMI said it had already committed $4.5 billion in supporting a team of 400 world-class scientists, engineers and technicians who had spent years creating and testing a range of smoke-free products that offered a much better choice for the millions of smokers who didn’t quit.
    It said that more than five million smokers worldwide had already completely abandoned cigarette smoking and switched to IQOS, PMI’s heated tobacco product, with 10,000 smokers switching every day. And PMI added that it was not the only company pursuing innovation as important to the world’s one billion smokers worldwide – the tobacco industry generally is beginning to move in this direction, to the benefit of men and women who smoke.
    “Our short-term ambition is that one out of three of our consumers, 40 million men and women who smoke, will have switched to better alternatives by 2025,” said Calantzopoulos. “Ultimately, we want to be in a position to stop selling cigarettes entirely. However, we need the support of governments and the public health community to make this happen in as short a time as possible. I believe that instead of just designating one day as World No Tobacco Day, we should promote every day as World No Smoking Day.”
    PMI said it was proposing that governments and authorities investigate thoroughly how scientifically substantiated smoke-free products could be used as a complementary public health strategy alongside smoking prevention and cessation. With appropriate government control and oversight, these products could have a meaningful and positive impact on public health, it added.
    More information about PMI’s views on World No Tobacco Day is at: http://www.pmi.com/world-no-smoking-day-2018.

  • JT on sustainability

    JT on sustainability

    Highlights of the JT Group’s 2017 Sustainability Report are said to include the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, solid progress in Japan Tobacco International’s Agricultural Labor Practices program, and an increase in illicit tobacco seizures.
    According to a note included on JTI’s website, the report, which is now available, details some of the key contributions of JTI in meeting the group’s sustainability objectives.
    ‘JTI’s most significant achievements over the past year include:
    * ‘21.2 percent reduction in the group’s overall greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. A target achieved three years in advance, coupled with an increasing proportion of our electricity needs sourced from renewable energies.
    * ’90 percent of our directly contracted tobacco farmers are now observed against our Agricultural Labor Practices standards (a 69 percentage-point increase versus 2016), enhancing the presence of our social programs where we source our tobacco.
    * ‘Record seizures totaling over one billion illegal cigarettes by law enforcement agencies thanks to the information provided by JTI’s experts.’
    “Our commitment to sustainability is stronger than ever,” says Suzanne Wise, JTI’s senior vice president corporate development.
    “We know that to make a positive difference across all areas of our business, we need to maintain high international standards and uphold rigorous business practices. We owe this to our consumers, our shareholders, our employees, the communities we work with, the wider society and our planet.”
    JTI said it was constantly looking at innovative ways to achieve and exceed its environmental targets, and had implemented a number of sustainable initiatives, including a world first with a solar steam project in its Jordan factory.
    ‘In 2017, we achieved the Leadership status in CDP4 Climate Change for the second consecutive year – and CDP Water for the first time,’ it said. ‘The JT Group was also selected as a member of the Dow Jones Sustainability Asia/Pacific Index for the fourth consecutive year.’
    JTI said its Agricultural Labor Practices aimed to foster good labor practices. Workers’ rights, workplace health and safety, and prevention of child labor were the three fundamental elements monitored by the company’s expert technicians when visiting farmers.
    Last year had seen 15,095 more children in JTI’s tobacco-sourcing communities gain access to education through its ARISE program, as part of its ongoing fight to eliminate child labor.
    Turning to the illegal trade in tobacco products, JTI said the annual consumption of illicit tobacco exceeded 10 percent of all cigarettes sold globally (excluding China). ‘This trade means big business for organized crime gangs, affecting legitimate manufacturers, farmers, taxpayers, and retailers, while damaging businesses’ reputation,’ the note said. ‘In their fight against this unlawful value chain, our Anti-Illicit Trade experts have helped law enforcement agencies, by providing them with valuable information, seize over one billion illegal cigarettes or cigarette equivalents, close 20 illegal cigarette factories and uncover thousands of counterfeit e-cigarette products.’

  • Smoke-free sustainability

    Smoke-free sustainability

    Philip Morris International says it is fundamentally transforming its business by putting smoke-free products at the core of its sustainability efforts to address societal challenges, drive operational excellence and reduce its environmental footprint.
    The company yesterday published its third Sustainability Report (2017) in which it outlines the steps it is taking to bring about this transformation.
    ‘PMI’s commitment and ambition is to replace cigarettes as soon as possible with better alternatives to smoking for the millions of men and women who would otherwise continue to smoke,’ the company said in a note posted on its website.
    PMI said it was providing a more comprehensive picture of its sustainability activities. ‘With the aim of achieving greater transparency and facilitating the assessment of its progress, PMI has included a fuller set of metrics and data trends,’ it said. ‘In addition, the company has provided more contextual information on its business and how sustainability is managed, taking into account feedback received on its 2016 report.’
    Last year, PMI introduced a set of Business Transformation Metrics to track progress against its goal of a smoke-free future, and key 2017 milestones were said to have included:

    • ‘PMI’s resource allocation continues to shift to smoke-free products, which accounted for 74 percent of global R&D expenditure and 39 percent of global commercial spend.
    • ‘Smoke-free products [including heated tobacco products and electronic cigarettes] represented approximately 4.4 percent of PMI’s shipment volume and around 13 percent of net revenues, excluding excise taxes.
    • ‘PMI estimates that, by the end of 2017, over 4.7 million adult smokers had stopped smoking cigarettes and made the change to IQOS (PMI’s main smoke-free product), while approximately 10,000 more consumers are switching every day.’

    The report is said to provide also an overview of PMI’s wider sustainability efforts to create long-term value: from how it is addressing social and environmental impacts to managing the impact of transformation on PMI’s value chain and excelling in how it operates. Key progress in 2017 was said to have included:

    • ‘More than one-third, 34.4 percent, of the management positions at PMI held by women, showing progress against the company’s goal of reaching 40 percent by 2022.
    • ‘PMI’s rollout of Responsible Sourcing Principles to help identify and manage labor issues in its non-agricultural supply chain.
    • ‘Environmental milestones include being recognized for the fourth consecutive year on CDP’s Climate A-List, and for the first time its water programs achieved the CDP Water A-list ranking.’

    PMI said it remained focused on securing the integrity of its supply chain through its efforts to tackle the illegal trade in tobacco products, while pushing transparency further by publishing its approach to corporate tax and data privacy, and providing an overview of its Marketing Principles and Principles for Engagement with third parties.
    ‘The progress PMI has made is an indication of its sustainability ambitions,’ the note said. ‘PMI is on course with its business transformation, delivering on its CO₂ reduction targets, improving in the area of inclusion and diversity to meet key goals, and strengthening the governance of its sustainability management.
    ‘The report also highlights how, going forward, reducing the environmental footprint of the smoke-free products’ manufacturing process, promoting crop diversification among tobacco farmers and equipping PMI employees to successfully transform the company are essential.’

  • PMI to webcast meeting

    PMI to webcast meeting

    Philip Morris International is due to host at www.pmi.com/2018annualmeeting a live audio webcast of its 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, which is scheduled to start at 09.00 Eastern Time on May 9.
    During the meeting, Louis C. Camilleri, chairman of the Board, will address shareholders and answer questions, while CEO André Calantzopoulos will give the business presentation.
    The audio webcast, which will be in listen-only mode, may be accessed also on iOS or Android devices by downloading PMI’s free Investor Relations Mobile Application at www.pmi.com/irapp.
    An archived copy of the webcast will be available until 17.00 on June 7 at www.pmi.com/2018annualmeeting.
    Presentation slides and script will be available, also at www.pmi.com/2018annualmeeting.

  • Cantonal smoking ban

    Cantonal smoking ban

    The canton of Ticino is due on Thursday to become the first in Switzerland to ban tobacco smoking in public places, according to a Swiss Radio International story.
    Several other cantons are considering whether to follow suit, and a nation-wide ban has been mooted.
    The citizens of Ticino decided to follow neighboring Italy’s lead and voted overwhelmingly in favor of banning smoking in bars restaurants and discos.
    However, the local authorities announced this week that the cantonal parliament had decided to extend the ban to cover administrative buildings, schools, shopping centers, museums and public transport.
    The full story is at: https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/ticino-tightens-the-screws-on-smokers/5829766.