BIG TOBACCO’S ‘NEXT-GEN’ EVANGELISTS
Cigarette majors are spending billions on ‘reduced-risk’ alternatives, but they may be blowing smoke on their future market share.
TORONTO• Between a Starbucks and a kebab shop on Toronto’s busy Yonge Street retail corridor, the words “inventing a smoke-free future” appear on the window of a sleek, silver-fronted store. Inside, gadgets that look more like Apple products are neatly arranged on wooden tables.
“Are you currently a cigarette smoker?” the saleswoman asks, showing off the IQOS, a device slightly larger than an index finger that looks like an electronic cigarette but uses sticks of tobacco rather than liquid to create a smoke-like vapour.
“It’s not completely without risk,” she said, explaining how a little blade inside the gadget pierces the cigarette and heats the tobacco to 330 degrees, just shy of combustible temperature. “But absolutely reduced risk compared with continued smoking.”
With its clean, minimalist vibe, the store looks like somewhere one would buy an eyebrow wax or a $2,000 laptop rather than a pack of smokes. But IQOS is owned by tobacco giant Philip Morris International Inc. Indeed, the esthetic nod to health spas and Silicon Valley is at the heart of the industry’s attempt to keep the millions of consumers who are abandoning cigarettes.
Over the past several years, tobacco companies have pumped billions of dollars into “potentially reduced-risk” products, both tobacco-heating devices such as IQOS, as well as ecigarettes and vapes that use nicotine-infused juices mixed with propylene glycol and glycerine to create the sensation of smoking.
These devices are still a small part of Big Tobacco’s globe-spanning business, but majors such as PMI and British American Tobacco PLC are making noises about a future in which they make more money from “next-generation” products than from cigarettes.
Both companies — or rather their subsidiaries, Rothmans Benson & Hedges Inc. (PMI) and Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd. (BAT) — have begun dipping their toes into the Canadian market with the respective releases of IQOS and Glo in a limited number of test markets.
A lack of federal regulations and a hodgepodge collection of provincial rules, however, has largely kept the big players away from the market, leaving the “smoking cessation” field to independent vape producers and retailers willing to navigate the regulatory fog.
That’s set to change in the coming months. This past week, the federal government passed Bill S-5, an update to the Tobacco Act that will provide a framework for Health Canada to regulate vaping and heat-notburn tobacco products.
“Assuming that vaping becomes legal in Canada, we will be in there,” said David O’Reilly, BAT’s group scientific and R&D director. “And we’ll be bringing the scale that BAT and Imperial bring.”
The smooth-talking, silver-haired executive is in his office at BAT’s massive research facility in Southampton, England, where he oversees hundreds of engineers and scientists, the majority of whom are working on “reduced-risk” products. On his desk are several vapes; he said he quit smoking by using snus, an oral tobacco product similar to dipping tobacco, and continues using BAT’s various gadgets.
“By 2020, we estimate there will be 100 million next-generation-product consumers on the planet,” O’Reilly said. “We’re not doing this for PR, we’re doing this for good business sense."
On a global scale, BAT’s investment is beginning to show returns. In 2017, the company made nearly 300 million pounds in revenue from vaporizer products and more than 200 million pounds from Glo, mostly in Japan, the largest heatnot-burn market. It expects to introduce Glo to another 14 countries this year, and is forecasting over one billion pounds in revenue from next-generation products in 2018 and five billion pounds by 2022.
“By 2030, it will be 30 per cent of our business,” O’Reilly said. “By 2050, 50 per cent of our business.”
Key to this sales growth is cultivating the idea that these products are better for your health than cigarettes; that consumers and regulators should trust products developed and tested by large tobacco companies rather than independent vape manufacturers; and that governments should apply liberal tax and advertising regimes so that consumers are encouraged to switch from cigarettes.
Touring the Southampton facility, that assiduously crafted message is on display.
In one of the building’s many labs, a tangle of wires runs from the battery of a vaporizer, being developed for the Polish market, to a heat monitor. A machine puffs on the vape every 33 seconds, at a force supposed to emulate an intake of breath, to see if the battery will overheat over time.
In the next lab over, human-like lung tissue grown in a petri dish is exposed to vapour sucked through a mechanical lung apparatus.
“We don’t want to overinterpret the data, but everything we see from all the tests we do (on heated tobacco products) is showing reduced risk,” said a lab-coat-wearing biologist overseeing pre-clinical tests that look for various “biomarkers” in the lung tissue.
Answering the question of relative harm is crucial for tobacco companies’ ability to commercialize e-cigarettes and tobacco heating products, and they’re spending extraordinary amounts of money trying to build a case for regulators. So far, the reception has been mixed.
In the United States, PMI’s request to the Food and Drug Administration to market IQOS as a “reducedrisk” product was condemned in January by the scientific panel advising the agency, which said the company had not conclusively proved IQOS use would result in less disease.
Overseas, Public Health England, a government body that’s surprisingly supportive of e-cigarettes, remains reticent about tobacco heating research.
“The available evidence suggests that heated tobacco products may be considerably less harmful than tobacco cigarettes and more harmful than e-cigarettes,” the agency noted in a recent assessment. Out of 20 studies that it looked at, however, “12 were funded by manufacturing companies so there is a lack of independent research.”
The level of skepticism around any goodwill or scientific efforts by tobacco companies remains high, not least, as Britain’s Royal College of Physicians puts it, because “there is no firewall between a ‘good’ tobacco industry that is marketing harm-reduction products in the U.K. and a ‘bad’ one that promotes smoking, or undermines tobacco control activities, in low- and middle-income countries.”
E-cigarettes are having an easier time with public health advocates, in large part because there are more independent studies. Based on an analysis of published research, Public Health England concluded, “the cancer potencies of e-cigarettes were largely under 0.5 per cent of the risk of smoking.” The agency actively promotes e-cigarette use in mass advertising campaigns.
What to make of these new products and their various health claims has been the subject of heavy debate in Canada.
The federal government is treating IQOS and Glo as tobacco products, but appears to be taking a relatively liberal approach to e-cigarettes, banning lifestyle advertising but leaving the door open for certain government-approved statements about relative harm.
Most provinces, however, have put e-cigarettes in the same category as tobacco products, with all the limits on advertising and communication that entails. The approach has both critics and defenders.
“You don’t need advertising because consumers are doing it (switching to vaping) on their own,” said Rob Cunningham, senior policy analyst at the Canadian Cancer Society. He dismisses attempts by tobacco companies to market “reduced-risk” products as a “public relations effort.”
Tim Stockwell, director of the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research and a professor at the University of Victoria, takes an opposing view, arguing that alternative nicotine products should be widely marketed.
“Hardly any non-smokers are going to take up vaping and do it to any great extent. And even if every Canadian became addicted to using a vapour … there’d be fewer people dying,” Stockwell said.
“Regulators need to tighten things up to incentivize tobacco companies to price their products (differently). They need to be taxed out of existence, the old cigarettes, then give financial advantages and support for developing the alternative.”
Higher taxes on cigarettes, along with plain packaging rules (also part of S-5) are the public health measures that keep tobacco executives up at night, but lower taxes on next-gen products are a nice consolation prize.
The mini-cigarettes used inside Glos are proving more profitable per unit than traditional cigarettes, according to O’Reilly. But that’s only because, so far, they’re taxed at a much lower rate.
Even with a favourable tax regime, it’s still not clear just how successful Big Tobacco will be at launching their next-gen products in Canada. In Japan, the main tobacco heating test market, IQOS and Glo have had impressive uptake, but nicotine containing vape products are not allowed. Even with this prohibition, some recent tobacco heating results have been disappointing.
British Columbia marijuana advocates are warning that thousands of small-scale producers could be left out of the upcoming legal adult market unless the federal and provincial governments change their approach to craft cannabis.
That would put a significant dent B.C.’s economy and make it difficult for legal growers to undercut the black market, say five industry groups that signed an open letter, released Friday, to federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould and B.C. Attorney General David Eby.
“This is not a greenfield economic activity,” said Ian Dawkins, acting president of the Cannabis Commerce Association of Canada, one of the signatories. “What we’re asking for is people to be integrated into that system, rather than being shut out.”
The group wants microproducers to be granted growing licences so they can begin discussions with provincial wholesalers, now lining up supply contracts with producers already licensed to sell medical cannabis ahead of day one of recreational legalization. They’re also asking federal regulators to change the rules around micro-grow licences. Federal rules cap the size of micro-grow facilities at 200 square meters, or roughly 2,000 square feet.
“Your clones and your non-budding plants need to be accounted for in that 2,000 square feet as well, which means that you’re effectively much smaller than that,” said Dawkins, who suggested 5,000 to 10,000 square feet would be more commercially viable for small-scale grow-ops.
“The first thing that’s going to happen upon legalization is that prices are going to go (down)... Not all micro producers will survive, but the ones that do need to be a little bit bigger,” he said.
A more fundamental concern is that small-scale growers will be squeezed out by low wholesale prices offered by the B.C. Liquor Distribution Branch, the middleman for all recreational sales.
According to Dawkins, the BCLDB has suggested, in preliminary discussions on wholesale pricing, that it will buy cannabis at an average of $3 or $4 per gram. Small scale producers are going to have difficulty making money at those prices, he said.
Even medium-sized growers are going to have difficultly generating profits at these prices, according Dan Sutton, CEO of Tantalus Labs, a Maple Ridge, B.Cbased licensed producer.
The problem, according to Sutton, is that provincial wholesalers are basing their prices on cost-data reported by publicly traded licensed producers. But this data, he argued, is being presented in an overly-optimistic manner to attract investors. “Firms are claiming that they can grow at $1.60 or $2 a gram. Actually if you look at their all-in costs... it’s more like $4 or $5 a gram. And that’s the large guys,” said Sutton.
For both Dawkins and Sutton, the price compression problem could be partially solved if the BCLDB moved away from physical wholesaling and allowed producers to ship directly to retailers. Likewise, craft growers could potentially find greater margins if they can sell direct to consumers at their grow facilities.
NOT ALL MICRO PRODUCERS
WILL SURVIVE, BUT THE ONES
THAT DO NEED TO BE A LITTLE
BIT BIGGER. — IAN DAWKINS