The Citizen (KZN)

Tobacco lights up summit

The 17th World Conference ‘Tobacco OR Health’ starts today in Cape Town.

- Paris Tobacco epidemic Throats wasted by cancer Aggressive expansion e-Cigare es a hot topic

Some 3 000 anti-tobacco experts and policy makers convening this week in Cape Town, confront an industry flush with profits and determined to expand the market for its deadly product.

The 17th World Conference on Tobacco or Health, meeting from today until Friday, will review the latest research on e-cigarettes, debate which policies best blunt tobacco sales, and take stock of worrying trends across the developing world.

The name of the conference, “Tobacco OR Health”, leaves no room for doubt: you can’t have both.

“The cigarette is the single most deadly consumer product ever made,” said Ruth Malone, a professor at the University of California’s San Francisco School of Nursing and editor-in-chief of the Tobacco Control journal.

Tobacco claims nearly seven million lives yearly from cancer and other lung diseases, and accounts for about one-in-10 deaths worldwide – a million in China alone – according to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Even as the percentage of adults who smoke has dropped in rich nations and plateaued in some emerging ones, the total number of smokers keeps climbing, driven by an expanding global population and more people in poor countries lighting up.

The industry sold 5.5 trillion cigarettes last year to nearly a billion smokers, generating some $700 billion (R8.4 trillion) in sales.

“The fact remains that one out of every four men still smoke, as do one out every 20 women,” Emmanuela Gakidou, a researcher at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation said. What the WHO calls a “tobacco epidemic” eats up $1 trillion (R12 trillion) in healthcare expenses and lost productivi­ty every year.

But the United Nations, government­s, NGOs and activists have not stood by idly.

The 180-nation Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the only treaty negotiated under the WHO, lays out actions for curbing supply and demand.

Measures include higher prices and taxes, laws to curb smoking in public places, graphic labelling on the dangers of tobacco, banning advertisin­g and programmes to help people quit.

“The single most effective measure to reduce tobacco use is to increase the price of tobacco products, through taxation or pricing,” Kelley Lee, a policy expert at Simpson Fraser University in British Columbia said. Australia, Canada, France, Britain and other European countries have also pushed through laws requiring logo-free, plain packaging dominated by graphic images such as rotted teeth and throats wasted by cancer.

Cities around the world have banned smoking in public places, including Shanghai last year.

Health advocates say these efforts have saved 35 million lives over the past decade.

At the same time, however, they have barely dented industry profits.

British American Tobacco – the largest publicly-traded tobacco company in the world after the takeover last year of Reynolds American – raked in $7.2 billion (R86.4 billion) in profits in 2016.

The shares of all major listed tobacco companies soared in 2017.

“The tobacco industry has learned to wield extensive political influence to survive, and even thrive, despite producing and marketing a product that kills half of its regular customers,” said Lee. “There is no easy way to challenge such a powerful industry given its deep pockets.”

Indeed, experts express concern about several developmen­ts in the last few years. And one is the aggressive expansion of state-run tobacco monopolies in East Asia.

“The global market share of the new emerging – especially Asian – tobacco companies is growing rapidly,” said Jappe Eckhardt, a professor at the University of York in England.

Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal, (JTI) he said, morphed in less than a decade from a domestical­ly oriented company to a major multinatio­nal. “Our research shows that Korea is going to follow suit,” with Taiwan and Indonesia not far behind, he said.

And China Tobacco – the largest in the world, with a 42% market share of cigarettes sold – “is poised to dwarf all existing companies in the foreseeabl­e future”. Another hot topic at the conference will be e-cigarettes, which has caused a “sharp division” in the public health community, said Lee.

“Given how relatively new these products are, we just don’t have the data on their long-term health impacts,” said Lee.

The jury is still out, she said, on whether vaping is a “gateway” to combustibl­e smoking, and may be dangerous in itself.

Big Tobacco has invested heavily in electronic cigarettes. This is the “big five” largest global tobacco industry companies – Philip Morris Internatio­nal, BAT, Imperial Brands, JTI and China Tobacco.

Meanwhile, industry has opened up a legal front in the war over tobacco, launching dozens of lawsuits against government­s on every continent trying to enact anti-smoking laws. – AFP

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