Arab Times

US proposes cigarette nicotine cut, shift toward e-cig

‘Chemical compounds in tobacco cause illness and death’

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WASHINGTON, July 29, (RTRS): The US government proposed cutting nicotine in cigarettes to “non-addictive” levels on Friday in a major regulatory shift designed to move smokers toward potentiall­y less harmful e-cigarettes.

Shares of major tobacco companies in the United States and UK slumped in heavy trading volume after the proposal was unveiled by the head of the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, with the world’s biggest producers losing about $26 billion of market value.

“Nicotine itself is not responsibl­e for the cancer, the lung disease and heart disease that kill hundreds of thousands of Americans each year,” FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb said.

“It’s the other chemical compounds in tobacco and in the smoke created by setting tobacco on fire that directly cause illness and death.”

The FDA cannot reduce nicotine levels to zero, nor can it ban cigarettes. But Gottlieb said the agency would study regulating nicotine levels with a view toward the “FDA’s potential to render cigarettes minimally addictive or non-addictive.”

Analysts said they expect regulators in Europe to study similar actions on nicotine products.

The action shakes up a debate among public health advocates as to whether e-cigarettes represent a health risk or potential benefit.

“While there’s still much research to be done on these products and the risks that they may pose, they may also present benefits that we must consider,” Gottlieb said.

Gottlieb, a cancer survivor and physician

In this Nov 10, 2016 photo test cigarettes sit in a smoking machine in a lab

at the centers fro Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. (AP)

who was confirmed as FDA Commmmissi­oner on May 9, was expected to be friendly toward the ecigarette industry since he previously held a financial interest in a so-called “vape” shop called Kure.

During an April hearing on whether to advance his nomination for the FDA position, he said some e-cigarettes may have the potential to wean smokers off combustibl­e cigarettes and be less harmful.

The FDA’s announceme­nt sets in motion a lengthy rule-making process that will involve public comment and input from multiple stakeholde­rs before any measures take effect.

“It’s hard to overstate what this could mean for the companies affected: non-addictive levels of nicotine would likely mean a lot fewer smokers and of those people who do still light up, smoking a lot less,” said Neil Wilson, a senior market analyst with ETX Capital in London.

Most big tobacco makers have long seen the writing on the wall and have invested in e-cigarettes and other alternativ­e nicotine delivery systems, potentiall­y mitigating the blow from any decline in cigarette sales.

“We see this as an opportune entry point for long-term investors and would recommend building positions on today’s broad weakness,” Bonnie Herzog, an analyst at Wells Fargo Securities said in a research report, noting that the FDA is currently reviewing IQOS, a product from Altria Group Inc and Philip Morris Internatio­nal that heats tobacco instead of burning it.

For e-cigarettes, the agency extended the deadline by up to four years, and up to three years for cigar companies, to comply with a 2016 rule that gave the FDA oversight over the products, giving them more time on the market without regulation.

Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said the FDA’s proposal “represents a bold and comprehens­ive vision with the potential to accelerate progress in reducing tobacco use and death.”

But he added that the extension of e-cigarette deadlines “will allow egregious, kid-friendly e-cigarettes and cigars, in flavors like gummy bear, cherry crush and banana smash, to stay on the market with little public health oversight.”

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