Business Day

Philip Morris SA urges exemption for new product

- Tamar Kahn Science and Health Writer

Philip Morris SA has urged the government to create exemption in its new tobacco bill that would enable it to provide consumers informatio­n about its heated tobacco product, IQOS.

The Control of Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Bill, gazetted for public comment on May 9, contains provisions that prohibit all tobacco product advertisin­g.

If enacted in its current form, it would prevent Philip Morris from providing consumers with informatio­n about IQOS, said Neetesh Ramjee, head of corporate affairs for reduced-risk products, on Monday.

“The current legislatio­n allows the minister to exempt certain products. It would make sense to insert this clause into the new bill. If we don’t have this mechanism, people will stay on cigarettes,” Ramjee said.

About 7-million South Africans are smokers, he said.

Current tobacco legislatio­n permits Philip Morris to provide smokers with informatio­n about IQOS, for example, in leaflets attached to cigarette packets, said Ramjee. Under the new bill, this would be prohibited.

“Eventually we want to get out of the cigarette business.

“We are trying to provide alternativ­es that will meet people’s needs,” he said, noting that Philip Morris anticipate­d a high percentage of the people who switched to IQOS would stay on the product forever.

Philip Morris, which makes the well-known brand Marlboro, has invested more than $4.5bn in the past decade developing smoke-free products such as IQOS, which it said are less harmful than convention­al tobacco products.

The device heats small sticks of processed tobacco to 350°C, which is hot enough to release vapour but not hot enough to burn. It came to SA in April 2017 and targeted the well-heeled market: a starter-pack retails at about R950 and contains the heating device and 10 packets of tobacco sticks.

A packet of 20 IQOS sticks sells for slightly less than the R40 retail price of a pack of premium cigarettes, said Ramjee.

The new bill paves the way for stringent tobacco laws that will for the first time bring e-cigarettes into the regulatory fold. E-cigarettes are unregulate­d because, instead of tobacco, they contain cartridges filled with nicotine.

Philip Morris said it is seeking legislatio­n that draws a distinctio­n between convention­al tobacco products, such as cigarettes, and those that pose less of a risk to consumers.

The World Health Organisati­on has welcomed the bill, saying that it was consistent with SA’s obligation­s under the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and brought the country back to the forefront of internatio­nal tobacco control best practice.

The WHO said that the emissions from heated tobacco products and e-cigarettes contained toxins, metals, nicotine and other harmful and potentiall­y harmful substances.

“Evidence to date suggests that [they] generally contain lower levels of toxic substances found in cigarette smoke, but there is insufficie­nt independen­t scientific evidence to conclude that they are less harmful than convention­al tobacco products,” the WHO said in a statement.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Smoke without fire: An IQOS e-cigarette outlet in London. Philip Morris introduced the device to SA in April 2017 and the product targets the more affluent market.
/Reuters Smoke without fire: An IQOS e-cigarette outlet in London. Philip Morris introduced the device to SA in April 2017 and the product targets the more affluent market.

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