The Philippine Star

Phillip Morris to sell heat-not-burn tobacco product in Phl

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

HONGKONG – Leading multinatio­nal tobacco company Phillip Morris Internatio­nal is not losing its sight on penetratin­g the smoking population in the Philippine­s, albeit hoping for less stringent regulation­s as it continues to lean toward a smoke-free puffing world.

With the goal of a “smokefree future,” the maker of Marlboro and other major cigarette brands, is targeting to commercial­ize its “heat-notburn” iQOS devices sooner rather than later, depending on government regulation­s which it hopes to be less strict than the convention­al cigarettes.

“We know that they are ready in the Philippine­s but I also know that currently, legislator­s are trying to figure out what to do with this category. When that gets a bit more settled, we will know better how and when,” said James Arnold, PMI director for regulatory strategy and engagement in South and Southeast Asia, in a briefing here.

“There are lot of things that we are currently evaluating, consumer awareness is one of them, looking at the current regulatory framework and hopefully all those we can make a decision soon when to commercial­ize,” he said.

Latest internatio­nal data showed there are close to 16 million Filipino smokers or about 23.8 percent of the adult population.

Another study conducted by PMI also showed that 60 percent of Filipino adult smokers are wiling to try alternativ­es if these are legal, met quality and safety standards and are convenient­ly available in the market.

PMI’s iQOS devices use battery power to heat tobacco at a very precise temperatur­e, hot enough to generate aerosol to inhale and release nicotine but never gets to the point that the tobacco burns, which is said to be the major problem, not tobacco nor nicotine.

“Government­s should recognize that the world is not binary anymore and there are products that can be part of the solution. We are now across the Asian region, selling in Japan, Korea, and Malaysia, and all of them, we have seen consistent­ly that smokers are ready for something better,” Arnold said.

iQOS has yet to be commercial­ized in the Philippine­s and while there are a quite a number of other “smoke-free devices” in the country, these are oftentimes purchased in the black market.

Currently, PMI has a couple of manufactur­ing facilities in the Philippine­s which produce the convention­al cigarettes, but moving toward its goal may also pave the way for a possible additional facility in the future.

“There is good potential for Philippine tobacco in this smoke-free category. We cannot say that it will be a major source but there is a role to play,” Arnold said.

And while several countries, including the Philippine­s, are focusing on regulation and taxation to bring down cigarette consumptio­n, the World Health Organizati­on already said there will still be around a billion smokers globally by 2025.

“People want to see better alternativ­es, our ambition is to give consumers what they want, to give smokers better alternativ­es. We see where consumers are going, what they want, we know that through technology, we can invest in products that can help consumers and transform public health,” Arnold said.

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