Tag: Tobacco-Free Kids

  • CTFK Accuses PMI of Targeting Youth with F1 Sponsorship

    CTFK Accuses PMI of Targeting Youth with F1 Sponsorship

    The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids criticized Philip Morris International (PMI) for its partnership with Ferrari to market Zyn nicotine pouches on Formula 1 race cars, calling it a tactic that exposes youth to tobacco marketing. Yolonda C. Richardson, president and CEO, said PMI’s claim that the sponsorship targets adults is “laughable.” Formula 1 previously said that Gen Z (those born between 1997 and 2012) “is helping shape the rhythm of modern fandom,” but Richardson argued that F1’s audience now includes more than 4 million children aged 8 to 12, evidenced by collaborations with youth-oriented brands like Disney, Lego, and Hot Wheels.

    Richardson said that plastering Zyn logos on F1 cars associates the product with excitement and glamour, has the potential to attract millions of young people, and urged Formula 1 and its partners to end the sponsorship, calling on policymakers to prevent tobacco companies from targeting a new generation of consumers.

    When asked for comment, a spokesperson for PMI U.S. clearly disagreed.

    “Adult consumers of nicotine products do not live in a vacuum,” the spokesperson said. “They have hobbies, interests, and attend social gatherings and events—it’s vital to reach them where they are. Scuderia Ferrari HP at Formula 1 is a global platform where we can engage adult consumers worldwide with a message of choice and innovative alternatives to smoking.

    “CTFK’s allegation is nothing more than a tired, lazy, and erroneous characterization—absent of any facts. Formula 1’s and Scuderi Ferrari HP’s audience is overwhelmingly adult, and our brand presence is carefully assessed to ensure responsible marketing practices.”

  • CTFK Boss Says Global Playbook Weakening Public Health

    CTFK Boss Says Global Playbook Weakening Public Health

    Political positioning continues in advance of next month’s Eleventh Conference of the Parties (COP11) in Geneva, with Yolonda C. Richardson, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, accusing the tobacco industry of deploying a “global playbook” to weaken public health commitments, particularly focusing on the Caribbean nations of Saint Kitts, Nevis, Barbados, and Trinidad and Tobago. In a press release, Tobacco-Free Kids said it joined other anti-tobacco organizations in sending a letter to the governments of Saint Kitts and Nevis expressing concern “about the need to safeguard public health policymaking from the influence of the tobacco industry.” The letter was sent because it said at COP10 in Panama, Saint Kitts and Nevis, “raised serious alarm” by taking positions “closely mirroring industry talking points.”

    “Governments must remember one truth:” Richardson wrote. “The tobacco industry is the architect of the global tobacco epidemic which kills more than 8 million people each year. Big Tobacco’s presence is toxic to rational, evidence-based policymaking. Governments must shut the door on tobacco industry interference and stand united to protect kids from a lifetime of addiction.”