Category: Events

  • Korean Ministry Urges Group to Cancel Vape Show

    Korean Ministry Urges Group to Cancel Vape Show

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    South Korea’s Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) has urged events organizer The Fairs to cancel its Korea Vape Show 2023, reports Korea Biomedical Review.

    The exhibition is scheduled to take place July 21-23 in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province.

    “We sent a letter asking for the event to be canceled because we had concerns from a health promotion perspective,” a MOHW official was quoted by Yonhap News as saying. “We are also concerned that adolescents may visit the show if access to the convention is not properly controlled.”

    The ministry also expressed worries about advertised vaping contests that it said would violate indoor smoking restrictions. South Korea allows indoor smoking only in separate, fully enclosed areas.

    The MOHW said it plans to inspect the venue on the day of the event and impose penalties if the organizers fail to create a fully enclosed smoking room inside the venue.

    The organizers said they had submitted plans to resolve the issues raised by critics and said it would not cancel the convention.

    The official also stressed that previous conventions had been held without problems. “During the past three conventions, officials from the local public health center visited the convention and found no wrongdoings,” she said. 

  • Innovative Focus

    Innovative Focus

    TabExpo returned to the nicotine show circuit in Bologna, Italy, in May with innovative industry insights.

    By VV Staff

    TabExpo is back. Since the inception of TabExpo in 1994, the industry trade show has provided exhibitors and visitors with interests in the nicotine industry an elite opportunity to showcase their products and network among contemporaries. This year, TabExpo was held at the BolognaFiere in Bologna, Italy, May 10–11, and visitors and exhibitors alike said the show exceeded their expectations.

    In November 2019, TabExpo was acquired by U.K.-based Quartz Business Media, owner and organizer of the largest network of tobacco and nicotine-related exhibitions and conferences in the world. This year’s event was attended by over 100 exhibitors and more than 2,000 visitors representing all aspects of traditional and next-generation nicotine products from leaf suppliers to e-liquid manufacturers.

    TabExpo is much more than a typical tobacco tradeshow. One highlight of TabExpo 2023 was its Innovations in Tobacco conference. The sessions mainly focused on the future of the nicotine industry and the roles sustainability and modernization will play. The congress sessions were often standing room only. Below is an overview of the sessions and the insights shared by the numerous speakers.

    Keynote: Flora Okereke, head of global regulatory insights and foresights at BAT

    Conversations on the regulatory environment in the nicotine industry can be complicated. During her keynote, Flora Okereke, head of global regulatory insights and foresights at BAT, told attendees that regulation is important because many of the industry’s tobacco harm reduction goals can be enhanced by the policy environment. However, regulation can also create an obstacle.

    Okereke said that beyond regulatory policy, innovation is driving the transformation from both within the manufacturing supply chain and the retail sector. “In the past year, there has been a huge upheaval as a result of innovation, as a result of acquisitions, as a result of what we are doing in a journey to transform our industry,” she said. “You can see this in the amount of products that are new and coming to the markets, and the technologies that are coming up, and the kind of ways that we are monitoring environmental issues.”

    Additionally, the nicotine industry is no longer made up exclusively by major tobacco companies. Most of the innovations, such as e-cigarettes, were developed by entities outside the traditional tobacco sector. When considering the regulatory environment for next-generation products, Okereke said that regulators should not regulate blindly and must take the time to consider the impacts regulation can have on harm reduction goals.

    “I will say that because of the transformation, because of the eagerness for us to move from smoking tobacco to our newer products, expectations that are being made without proper milestones are going to create problems,” she explained. “I can [also] tell you regulation, while it is not something that you do daily, it’s a critical accelerant—a critical catalyst for our industry. It can derail what we are doing, but also, it can support a moving forward. This is why we have to not ignore it and put our head under the table but to face it squarely and be constructive as to how we look at it.”

    One of the potentially most impactful regulatory decisions being considered that could affect nicotine is environmental policy. Okereke said that environmental protection is now at the top of everyone’s agenda: many governments, many nongovernmental organizations, and it’s a public policy priority. There is even an environmental meeting at the global level being held by the United Nations trying to formulate a treaty similar to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control  that, when it comes to plastics, is probably going to change our industry, she said.

    “The tobacco control advocates are calling on the prohibition of filters, on disposables, on the treatment of waste,” said Okereke. “This is happening not just at a global level; it is happening in most of the markets. So the sector needs to work together in a constructive manner to agree and determine how it responds to what is coming,” she said. However, if governments can put in place a regulation that permits companies to give clear communications to consumers to help them understand the relative risk of various products, that kind of regulation would be a catalyst that should work for everyone.

    “If the regulator would look at some of these new products … and understand that the relative risk means that they could be incentivized, maybe in a fiscal way, that will enable adults who would like to move away from smoking to make that movement because we all believe that what they want, what society wants and to some degree what some smokers want, or our consumers, is to have the choice to move to a reduced-risk product,” said Okereke.

    Another major issue driving regulation is concern about youth access, especially in relation to next-generation products such as disposable vaping devices. “It’s almost the underpinning reason that justifies why regulators are taking very extreme measures,” said Okereke. “And I think it’s important that we look at it. I think it’s important that we find a solution that addresses this issue,” she said. “It is also because of this, the regulators say, [that] issues like flavors are being treated negatively. Whether you are a manufacturer or a person in the supply chain, [it] is important that we find the right solution to address [youth access].”

    Okereke also discussed the latest regulatory trend: tobacco “endgame” legislation, which is a tool to end the use of tobacco. Unfortunately, some countries are looking beyond tobacco and using that concept to call for an end to nicotine in any form. “Please don’t ignore the endgame scenario and think that it refers only to cigarettes,” she cautioned. “It doesn’t.”

    In the end, Okereke said that all sectors of the nicotine industry must join together to fight for sensible harm reduction policies that drive consumers away from combustible tobacco products. Now is the time to work together to give the government a single message that less risky nicotine products have a role to play in smoking cessation, she insisted. “We need to defend and protect that space for all of us, especially during the upcoming COP10 in Panama later this year,” she said.

    Okereke also urged the industry to stress to regulators the value of harm-reduction products ahead of the WHO gathering. “I think it is time for you to use your access to your government,” she said. “Remember, the parties are the ones mandated to make decisions at this meeting. Countries have the mandate to raise their voice and their opinion.”

    Keynote: Patrick Basham, director of the Democracy Institute

    Communication is a problem in harm reduction circles. During his keynote address, Patrick Basham, director of the Democracy Institute, said that many medical professionals, consumers and anti-nicotine campaigners believe the narrative that all nicotine products are dangerous. Furthermore, many of these people wrongly believe that nicotine rather than the chemicals released during combustion causes cancer. They believe this, said Basham, because anti-tobacco harm reduction lobbyists have told them so.

    “These lobbyists have told them [these misconceptions] are true because they don’t trust tobacco and nicotine consumers with the truth, so they must alter it for them,” said Basham. “Now, it’s indeed true that most well-funded public health institutions and stakeholders are rabidly anti-tobacco harm reduction. The World Health Organization is the most clear-cut example. You’ve got billionaire philanthropists funding global campaigns that, in concert with the WHO, incentivized national governments and their public health agencies to ignore or to disparage tobacco harm reduction’s demonstrated ability to improve public health.”

    Many consumers, meanwhile, are either uninformed or ill-informed about tobacco harm reduction, and the specific products central to its implementation. Basham said that the ignorance is deeply frustrating because prohibitionist politicians, philanthropists, regulators, public health organizations and academics have consciously erected barriers to better consumer understanding of harm reduction products.

    Even more frustrating is that the governments of many smaller-sized and medium-sized nations look to organizations such as the WHO, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the EU for case studies, regulatory models, bureaucratic signals and political cover regarding tobacco harm reduction. However, what “our rulers and rule regulators say and what people believe about tobacco harm reduction and reduced-risk products is neither the actual truth nor the entire truth,” said Basham. “The good news about tobacco harm reduction is that the bad news is wrong.”

    According to Basham, the tobacco harm reduction experience is a positive story. Although it’s hard to be fair and balanced about tobacco harm reduction politics, the reality is that some steps taken by governments and public health bodies have empowered tobacco harm reduction while other steps have retarded its progress, he said.

    A good many countries, international institutions and public health organizations are employing and advocating for tobacco harm reduction policies and proven strategies to reduce cigarette consumption. Many governments have adopted quite sophisticated harm reduction strategies and policy prescriptions. To date, nearly 70 countries have adopted regulatory frameworks on reduced-risk products, and an enormous number and variety of electronic nicotine-delivery system products are in the marketplace, with nearly 16,000 flavors available and global sales rising to more than $15 billion. Heated-tobacco products are available in over 50 markets worldwide.

    “Only one Western democracy—Australia—still illogically and irrationally requires its citizens to possess a nicotine prescription to vape,” according to Basham. “Snus is legally bought in 81 countries. Reduced-risk products are already being used by 112 million people worldwide, with approximately 82 million vapers, 20 million heated-tobacco users and 10 million smokeless tobacco users,” he said, citing statistics from a Democracy Institute study. “The evidence in favor of tobacco harm reduction as a complementary intervention to help drive down death and disease from smoking is, I suggest to you, robust.”

    All the countries that adopted a regulatory framework for less risky nicotine products subsequently reported a dramatic decline in smoking prevalence. Countries that embrace vaping have witnessed a decrease in smoking rates that is twice as fast as the global average. “We now have extensive international evidence that vaping is the world’s most effective smoking cessation tool. Snus’ extensive contribution to improvements in Swedish public health is well documented,” he explains. “Let me just highlight that over the last 15 years, Sweden slashed smoking rates from 15 [percent] to 5.6 percent. The EU’s average smoking rate, meanwhile, is 23 percent, 4.5 times higher than Sweden.”

    When Norway allowed snus products to be more widely available, cigarette smoking fell by half in just 10 years. Japan’s tobacco harm reduction policies have led to a remarkable drop in cigarette smoking. In October 2020, the smoking rate in Japan dropped to a record low of 16.7 percent. Between 2016 and 2021, domestic combustible cigarette sales in Japan declined by 43 percent. This decline was directly attributable to the availability of heated-tobacco products, according to Basham.

    “So, tobacco harm reduction truly is a refreshingly good news story. That’s the reason governments around the world are increasingly placing tobacco harm reduction at the heart of their anti-smoking strategies. Governments should legalize the import, export, sales, possession and use of reduced-risk products,” said Basham. “Reduced-risk products should be as widely available as tobacco products and available without a prescription.”

    Panel: Reinventing for Sustainability

    Solutions to environmental concerns are not individual contributions but are built upon a series of interlocking breakthroughs and tweaks. That presents an almost composite picture of progress in the nicotine industry. Chris Greer, CEO of TMA, expressed this notion as moderator for the panel “Reinventing for Sustainability.” The discussion centered on how innovations are at the forefront of producing sustainable nicotine products from packaging to production to distribution to consumption.

    Everyone touched on new product innovation and that it will take the entire nicotine industry to work together to achieve many sustainability goals. Packaging, for example, transcends all consumer products. Innovations in packaging can help nearly all consumer product companies achieve a percentage of ESG goals. “In packaging, we have to react and change because of the pressure from the government or the environment,” said Michael Pierse, sales director at IRPLAST. “In 2018 and 2019, in the plastics industry, in our company, we all of a sudden realized that sustainability and environmental impact was no longer just something difficult we’re talking about, but it had to be enacted.”

    There is no cigarette company that would allow cigarettes to be sold unpackaged without wrapping film to guarantee the consumer receives the product in the same state it was when it came out from the factory (although they cannot prevent retailers in many developing countries from selling cigarettes by the stick to smokers with low disposable incomes).

    “We were faced with a challenge. Our product is fossil-based. Every kilogram of polypropylene film made from fossil fuels emits between 3.5 [kg] and 4 kg of carbon dioxide into the environment. That’s a very heavy fossil footprint to be addressed,” said Pierse, who highlighted his company’s NOPP (natural oriented polypropylene) tape, a new generation of high-performing and eco-friendly adhesive tapes manufactured with 50 percent recycled materials.

    There has been progress, too, on the front of filters, which remain one of the most commonly littered items on the planet. Filtrona CEO Robert Pye said his company has 10,000 future filter designs in a storage facility at its innovation center. He said that Filtrona is committed to more degradable and sustainable products. The higher degradability and nonplastic options of its ECO range is clear evidence of this commitment, he said. At TabExpo, Filtrona debuted its latest plastic-free innovation, the ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter.

    “We’re all on the journey together,” said Pye. “So even in our traditional filters, we have very good partners that we also develop traditional cigarette filters with reduced carbon effects and increased sustainability. A real game changer is the ECO range. This is something that we can see that can definitely transform the industry.”

    ECO range is born out of partnerships with Filtrona’s customers and suppliers. There are many different forms that Filtrona can move forward with its filter technology, but Pye said the ECO range will help both his company and the traditional cigarette manufacturers it supplies meet ESG goals.

    “I know from our sales and through China we’re seeing probably half of our developments now based in sustainable products within our range. Our customers are driving us that way,” said Pye. “We are seeing different sorts of materials supplies and equipment supplies which will help us progress further in the journey to supply more of the ECO range. Of course, to get all of these plans together in the [necessary] scale is something we need to work through as well.”

    Schweitzer-Mauduit International (SWM), too, has been working to improve the sustainability of its products. Last year, the company launched Evolute, a fiber-based filtering media. Alice Jaussaud, product manager in the engineered papers division at SWM, said that the company has observed an acceleration of the demand for alternative solutions that is reinforced by societal trends toward sustainability. “We can say that, in terms of innovation, we do whatever is possible or in our control to make it happen,” she said. “And then it is about working together; it is a lot about partnerships.”

    Also discussing filters, Luis Sanches of Greenbutts said that of the more than 5 trillion cigarettes produced globally each year, the majority end up in the environment after consumption. Cigarette butts are the most littered plastic item on earth. While most of a cigarette’s components quickly disintegrate when smoked or disposed of, the filter will stick around for some time. Around 98 percent of cigarette filters comprise cellulose acetate (CA), a polymer that is slow to degrade in the environment. It can take up to 14 years for a CA filter to degrade, depending on the conditions of the environment where it has been discarded.

    One challenge, according to Sanches, is ensuring that a better biodegradable filter doesn’t change the user experience. “We want the consumers to have the same or even better experience that they have currently,” said Sanches. “This is pretty much our mission.”

    Greenbutts spent almost a decade designing and developing filters that provide comparable taste and filtration properties as current CA filters but will disperse in water within several minutes with agitation and begin to degrade in compost within several days, according to Sanches. “You don’t want your wine to be affected by the glass that you’re drinking. And you don’t want your pasta or your lasagna to be affected by the plate it’s served on. The same thing for a cigarette,” he said. “Nobody wants the filter to alter their taste of the cigarette.”

    The machinery producing the filters is integral to helping companies meet their ESG goals. Montrade has led the way in making machines for sustainable products with production speeds of 5,000 filters per minute. It is also creating sustainable packaging solutions, according to Antonella Giannini, co-founder and sales director of Montrade.

    “Montrade always strives to develop for the ever-changing and fast-approaching future,” she said. “We work to provide the means for the industry to transition into the next generation of environmentally focused products, including biodegradable filters and plastic-free alternatives for multiple product categories,” she said when discussing her company’s partnership with Greenbutts. “When designing for the ocean and environmental sustainability, our innovations in paper filter technology along with novel plant-based technology, such as the Greenbutts’ water-dispersing substrate, will work together to meet the requirements of the European Union’s Single-Use Plastics Directive.”

    Summarizing the session, Greer stated that, fundamentally, meeting ESG goals is about trust. “The most important ingredient in all of the things that you are doing is trust; the trust that you have between yourselves and your clients, the trust that you have with your internal teams,” he observed.

    Keynote: Tim Phillips, managing director of Tamarind Intelligence

    The global e-cigarette is worth more than $50 billion. There are also now more than 100 million vapers worldwide, according to Tim Phillips, managing director at Tamarind Intelligence. This year marks the 10th anniversary of Wells Fargo Managing Director Bonnie Herzog’s famous prediction that vaping products would overtake the combustible cigarette market. Herzog’s prediction was bold, said Phillips, adding that she could not have imagined the regulatory firestorm suffered by vaping products.

    Phillips noted that in another 10 years, Herzog could prove to be correct, however. “I was doing some very back-of-the-envelope calculations this morning, but I think if you give it another 10 years, we might well get there,” he said. “We’ve got combustible cigarettes slowing down in pretty much all Western markets. We’re seeing growth rates in some of these novel nicotine products in the 10s or many more percent points per year. And over a period of 10 years, I think we may well see [combustibles] replaced. I think my message to you is just be really careful of that. I think we’re going to see a massive acceleration of alternatives for nicotine products, and we will see a replacement of combustible tobacco over time. It’s just a matter of time.”

    Next-generation nicotine products come in three dominant varieties: nicotine pouches, heated-tobacco products and vaping products. Phillips said the segment is growing fast but at different rates in different areas of the world. It’s also very fragmented. “It’s completely different to traditional combustible cigarettes,” he said. “The market is growing in all sorts of different ways, and there are enormous opportunities to benefit from some of that growth. Consider nicotine pouches … we’ve got a fragmented market in a similar kind of format to vape about seven [years] to 10 years ago. There are more than 50 brands in some of the markets, including in European markets. And we’ve got more than 500 products in each of these markets. That’s a huge amount of fragmentation.”

    Phillips said his organization, which provided the data for his keynote address, originally thought the nicotine pouch would be an interesting product for consumers who are already using chew tobacco products in the U.S. or a snus product in the Nordic countries. “What we’re seeing is this product category is really of interest to consumers in all sorts of markets, and we see lots of crossover with other types of products,” he said.

    According to Phillips, the data shows a lot of multi-usage with next-generation nicotine products, especially pouches. “Consumers have moved from a mono market where the only way to have nicotine was to smoke cigarettes or another type of combustible tobacco,” he said. “We’re moving into a world where that’s completely different, where there are multiple ways of using products. And what we’re finding is the consumers are faced with a huge choice of different types of products and using many of them at the same time.”

    Such fragmentation is less evident in the market for heated-tobacco products. According to Phillips, the data shows huge growth in the number of compatible products. Many of them are hardware, and many of the vape companies’ manufacturers in China are now also manufacturing compatible heating tobacco hardware.

    “We’ve seen a massive growth in the number of compatible heat sticks, and many of them are nontobacco-containing—made out of tea, made out of various other products,” said Phillips. More products are competing with the major tobacco companies’ heated-tobacco brands, and Phillips said one of the reasons this is happening is regulation.

    “In Europe, as many of you know, we’ve got a directive banning flavors for heated-tobacco products. It needs to be implemented in European member states, and it is brought into their local law by July this year, and it should be implemented from October,” he said. “We’ve got a couple of countries that have implemented the flavor ban, but there are plenty of countries that have [not].”

    In the world of vaping, Phillips said that massive growth is happening in the disposable products segment. This started in the U.S. After the FDA banned vape shops from selling flavored prefilled pods, disposables began to take over the market. Today, there are thousands of new disposable products in the market. It is also the segment most blamed, after the fall of Juul, for the rise in youth vaping. Phillips said disposables drove the youth uptick, not flavors as most regulators would claim.

    “What I’m saying is it’s not really flavors that are driving this. But it is something where youth are using disposable products much more than an older age group,” he said. “We’re seeing those that initiate with vaping; we’re starting to see a younger age group come through and initiate into vape. Of course, that’s going to happen as the sector grows … the predominant product that those age groups are using is the disposable product,” said Phillips. “There is a correlation, if you like, between disposables and youth. And there’s no getting away from it. I think the industry just needs to face up to that.”

    Keynote: Simon Clark, director of FOREST

    If people want to smoke, they should be allowed to smoke. It’s not illegal to smoke cigarettes or vape or eat a giant cake. Today, even when there are consumer panels, every speaker tends to be an advocate of vaping. Current and former smokers in defense of smoking are conspicuous by their absence. Simon Clark, director of FOREST, explained that during a tobacco conference last year, one of the first speakers got a round of applause when he told the audience that it had been six years since he had successfully quit smoking.

    “Now, just think about that for a moment. A keynote speaker at a tobacco industry event is applauded for having stopped smoking. Now, for a moment, I thought I’d stumbled into a meeting of addicts anonymous,” said Clark.  

    FOREST, the Freedom Organization for the Right to Enjoy Smoking Tobacco, was founded in 1979. Clark said that the organization fully accepts the health risks of smoking but insists that the debate is not just about health. It’s also about freedom of choice, personal responsibility, risk and the infantilization of society.

    “We therefore represent adults who know about the health risks of smoking but choose to smoke and don’t want to quit,” said Clark. “We also represent former smokers like myself. People who are tolerant of smoking believe that smokers are unfairly discriminated against and are opposed to excessive regulations on consumer products such as alcohol, tobacco and sugary drinks. I’m often asked why, as a nonsmoker, I defend the rights and interests of confirmed smokers. By this, I mean smokers who don’t want to stop. I try to explain that I genuinely think smokers are treated appallingly these days, whether it’s comprehensive smoking bans, punitive taxation, creeping prohibition or the general denormalization of a perfectly legal habit.”

    Clark said that even at tobacco industry events, the thinking appears to be that anti-smoking campaigns and legislation don’t affect nonsmokers. Or people believe it’s impossible to win the battle, so just ignore the war. The problem with that attitude is that it invites advocates of the nanny state to move on to issues such as alcohol and food. “Some call this the slippery slope,” said Clark. “We’ve been warning people about this for more than 20 years. I think you’ll appreciate [that] it’s actually happening because alcohol is under increasing attack, as is the type of things that we choose to eat.”

    Twenty years ago, no government and relatively few politicians enjoyed being pigeonholed as a supporter of the nanny state. Public smoking bans changed the narrative because although they didn’t join most of the public support at the time of their introduction, smoking bans are now talked about as an allegedly popular example of the nanny state and action, said Clark.

    “A narrative has also developed suggesting that smoking bans have been an enormous success. We’re told that cafes and bars are no longer the horrible smoky environment of old, that smoking rates fell [because of] smoking bans. And public health has dramatically improved. Although there is relatively little evidence to support that thesis,” said Clark. “Nevertheless, the so-called success of public smoking bans around the world has clearly encouraged public health campaigns and governments to press on with other restrictive measures. Many anti-smoking policies are presented as examples of a benign nanny state that wants to help people make the right choices. However, there is nothing benign about it. We are increasingly living in a bully state in which education has been replaced by coercion and compulsion.”

    According to Clark, there is nothing fair or benign about the current rates of taxation on tobacco. The current rate of tax on an average pack of cigarettes in the U.K., for example, is about 86 percent. The aim is to force smokers to quit, but it discriminates against those on low incomes. Sometimes if people don’t quit, it can force fervent poverty. Again, this is the mark of a police state.

    “In my view, tobacco control is no longer about public health,” said Clark. “Nicotine is a drug; so is alcohol; so is caffeine. But people choose to consume these products. No one is forced to smoke tobacco, drink alcohol or consume caffeine. The anti-smoking campaigners also argue that the tobacco industry targets children. The truth is that many teenagers like to experiment. Many [youth] experiment with alcohol, some with tobacco, and more recently, e-cigarettes. I don’t condone it, but it’s called growing up. In my experience, most of the attacks on the tobacco industry have nothing to do with health. It’s politics, pure and simple.”

    PANEL: Next-Generation Products: Delivering Innovation

    Innovation isn’t a light switch. It isn’t a process that happens suddenly. During a panel discussion on the topic, Jackie Zhuang, president of Macau Chongva Tobacco Factory, said that an easy way to understand innovation is to look at patents. As of the end of April, the estimated accumulated patents for vaping products from the four largest manufacturers in Europe plus Juul Labs was 69,500 patents, according to Zhuang. The number for the top 15 Chinese factories combined is an estimated 24,239.

    “The Chinese e-cigarette industry is working very hard to catch up in the fields of patent,” said Zhuang. “And the number we have from last year will be Chinese e-cigarette companies combined; we have 60 to 100 patents applied last year. And outside China, only 2,800,” explained Zhuang. “The innovation came from the manpower invested in Chinese e-cigarette companies (where an estimated 6,000 researchers are working in the e-cigarette industry).”

    China has long been the epicenter of e-cigarette manufacturing. Modern e-cigarettes were born there, and Shenzhen is home to 90 percent of all e-cigarette manufacturing worldwide. Zhuang said that Chinese manufacturers don’t often create new products; they specialize in making innovative products better. Zhuang said that for Chinese manufacturers, innovation is driven by their customers. “The customer wants something, and we offer a lot of [options] for the consumer,” he said. “When international brand owners try to develop their brands, they are [surprised at the types of innovations we can offer] their customers.”

    Phoebe Dong, regional marketing manager for Heaven Gifts, a major vaping industry manufacturer based in Shenzhen, agreed with Zhuang that most innovation is driven by the consumer. She said it is also driven by the maturation of research and development. She said that the end user doesn’t often know how technology in materials improves the function and the performance of vaping products. The consumer only sees the finished product and not the progressive innovations.

    “Competitive pressure can also drive companies to innovate to maintain their market position,” said Dong. “The emergence of new products and technologies … industry trends, technology trends, market trends and consumer trends all make an impact on innovation.” There are “two forces pulling there …. It’s competitive pressure and then it’s also your internal passion. You want to make a better product; you want to improve things.”

    Regulation also has an impact on innovation. Ian Fearon from McKinney Regulatory Science Advisors said that when creating new products, innovators must understand what the product’s potential impact on public health is. Then they need to look at the regulatory environment and which markets they want to go into.

    “Is it a permissive environment, such as the U.K. or some of the European countries? Is it a market that is very difficult to get into, such as the United States? And then with both of those aspects together, developing a rigorous assessment framework with which you can assess that innovation, generate the data which the regulators require for you to place that product on the market and then conduct those studies,” explained Fearon. “Use scientific experts to interpret the data, to translate that data into something that the regulator can understand and will want to approve for the market. Conduct those studies and then push the data out to the regulator.”

    Fearon said that to get new products through the regulatory process, innovators need to tell the story of a product so that the regulator understands the product and its potential impact. He said much of McKinney’s work is in creating that narrative, which takes complex scientific data and translates it into something tangible that the regulator can understand.

    “It comes from taking the clinical data, the TOPS data, the chemistry, taking any clinical data, nicotine absorption studies, taking any behavioral data, such as intentions to use studies,” said Fearon. “And integrating all of that into a narrative, which gives FDA information on the public health imperative of the innovator, which is really what FDA is looking for. If you market this product in the United States, will it improve public health? And it’s an unusually complex area, and it takes great expertise to integrate all of those very different and complex scientific disciplines into a single story. And I think the other thing you have to bear in mind as well with FDA is that they are looking, as far as I can tell, for you to provide words that they can put in their authorization letter … it’s almost like you have to help FDA make the decision that you ultimately make with the narrative and provide them with a sub-narrative that they can tell to the American public.”

    While innovation may be easier in countries with less stringent paths to market, bringing products to market in the U.S. is only getting more complicated and expensive. After spending billions of dollars on developing a product, in a country with a regulatory regime like the U.S. there is no guarantee that the product will ever make it to market.

    “You don’t know how long it’s going to take before we go [to market or the] innovation starts making money or starts improving public health. It could be three years, five years, nobody really knows,” said Fearon. “I think then, the contrast there is in a country that may contribute [to innovation in the vaping industry] like the U.K., which is open to innovation. It’s actively advising smokers to start vaping. Which is very different to what happens in the United States. Even to the point where we are seeing innovation within the U.K. government in that they are spending a million pounds in April, giving e-cigarettes to pregnant women—I mean, that’s just unheard of when you think about it. That’s an example of the regulator innovating to help the manufacturers innovate, which I think is an incredible example of the two different contrasts we have.”

    Fireside Chat: George Cassels-Smith, CEO of Tobacco Technology Inc.

    Flavorings in nicotine products are interesting. Most consumers think it’s just about taste. The reality is that few understand tobacco product flavorings and how they are produced. George Cassels-Smith, CEO of Tobacco Technologies Inc. (TTI) and eLiquiTech, said that TTI separates itself from its competition by tailoring each of its flavors to the customer’s application.

    “I don’t have a library, even though I’ve done 300,000 flavors. I don’t pull anything off the shelf,” said Cassels-Smith. “I innovate new flavors in the direction of my customer’s request. I might [have] several iterations in a portfolio first … and we then choose the direction that we would want to continue to develop. And ultimately, that becomes a unique flavoring system that is only for that particular customer.”

    Consumer testing and the evaluation of the product are at the heart of what TTI does for its clients. When a TTI salesman goes out to visit the customer and receives a project, he takes back all those requirements and works with the individual flavors within the profiles requested by the customer. TTI then has a team of sensory pros to help evaluate the different creations.

    “It’s usually three, four, five weeks for one single flavor,” said Cassels-Smith. “We save that company all that development time internally, and we give them the turnkey operation. And we call it joint development because it always has the input of the customer.”

    When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration began its crackdown on flavors in e-liquids, Cassels-Smith feared it would create a perception that TTI would stop innovating, which the company does constantly. However, TTI and eLiquiTech only had one facility, located in the U.S. state of Maryland, serving its global client list. He said the solution to that issue was to build a second facility in Assisi, Italy. There, he says, the TTI team is combining art and science.

    “Initially, it was just to have a second facility that was located close to product development. But with the advent of Covid and the disruption in supply chains, we found that the bifurcation of manufacturing greatly assisted us in our delivery and time. And that became very critical,” explained Cassels-Smith.

    Cassels-Smith also discussed how his company was the global supplier of synthetic nicotine produced by U.K.-based Zanoprima Technologies. According to him, the problem with extracting nicotine from tobacco is that it delivers an impurity profile that would contain potential carcinogens. “We find them mainly in two forms—tobacco-specific nitrosamines [TSNAs] and heavy metals. The virtue of the synthetic nicotine is that it doesn’t have a plant-root system that can absorb heavy metals, and since the starting material is a vitamin, it’s clean and it has no heavy metals, and I cannot develop TSNAs,” he said.

    Synthetic nicotine is not new. Nicotine was first synthesized in 1904. Molecules such as nicotine may exist in mirror-image forms with identical chemical makeup but sometimes differing biological activity. The nicotine molecule possesses chirality, meaning it exists in two mirror-image versions called enantiomers or stereoisomers. Nicotine comes in left (S) and right (R) forms. The (S)-isomer of nicotine greatly predominates in tobacco leaf, which contains only small amounts of the (R) variant (0.1 percent to 1.2 percent). Most synthetic nicotine has equal parts of both the (S)-isomer and (R)-isomer. Zanoprima’s product, SyNic, only has the (S)-isomer—the one that holds all the psychotropic effects that nicotine consumers want, according to Cassesls-Smith.

    When dealing with unique products in the nicotine industry, such as flavor profiles or synthetic products, competition can be fierce. There are also regulations that boost black markets and counterfeit goods. On the flavoring end, if you make a profile that does well in the market, it becomes a target. And other people might try and imitate it. And through reverse engineering, you can usually get fairly close, not exactly, he said.

    Cassels-Smith said some of the same issues are being experienced by the synthetic nicotine he distributes for Zanoprima. They developed an enzymatic process to create it, and when you’re the first to develop new technology, you can get a broad patent to prevent anybody else from imitating your product. Zanoprima has patents in 48 countries for its synthetic nicotine process.

    “If anybody is using an enzymatic nicotine and selling it in the market, Zanoprima is the sole patent holder in that market. But unfortunately, when it gets published, people can imitate,” said Cassels-Smith. “What we’re seeing right now is in the disposable market, which is the dominant global player, every one of them is using synthetic nicotine from an enzymatic process. And they’re selling them in markets that are violating the Zanoprima patent.”

    Cassels-Smith said he is in the process of taking legal action. “The legal process begins, but if anybody has ever been in the lawsuit, it’s the biggest nightmare in the world. Litigation costs are high,” he said.

  • Challenging Times

    Challenging Times

    As tobacco harm reduction continues growing in influence, it is also facing many obstacles.

    By Stefanie Rossel

    Regulatory policies, industry standards and medicinal licensing were among the themes tackled during the May 23–24 ENDS Europe Conference in Amsterdam.

    Many countries, including New Zealand and England, aim to be “smoke-free” by 2040, a term generally defined as less than 5 percent of the population lighting up. However, according to speakers at the event, most of these countries are unlikely to achieve their goals due to prohibitionist policies, such as incremental increases in purchase age, reductions in tobacco sales outlets or ultra-low-nicotine requirements.

    The country most likely to achieve smoke-free status is Sweden, according to the conference participants. By helping smokers switch to less harmful alternatives, such as snus, it is living proof that tobacco harm reduction (THR) is a more effective strategy than prohibition to reduce tobacco-related illnesses.

    Noting that millions of smokers don’t want to quit, Christopher Snowdon, head of lifestyle economics at the Institute of Economic Affairs in the U.K., presented an alternative, pragmatic and realistic smoke-free plan that includes a wide range of reduced-risk products (RRPs), such as snus, nicotine pouches, e-cigarettes and heated-tobacco products (HTPs), and focuses on educating consumers and fostering innovation. To put an end to misinformation about RRPs, Snowdon proposed the introduction of public information campaigns and cigarette pack inserts informing consumers in a band-neutral manner about the benefits of switching to less risky products.

    He also asked for better regulation, including advertising, tank and bottle sizes and nicotine limits. For HTPs and nicotine pouches, Snowdon proposed proportional tax and regulation and independent research. He warned policymakers against overregulation, naming e-cigarette taxes, flavor bans or indoor vaping bans as examples. Anything that makes vaping, HTPs, snus or nicotine pouches less appealing will make smoking relatively more appealing, he cautioned.

    More Challenges Ahead

    Regulations, however, continue to mount. Ciprian Boboi, founder and board member of the Independent European Vape Alliance, provided an overview of upcoming EU laws that will affect the nicotine sector. The Battery Regulation, which will be adopted in June or July this year, stipulates that the batteries in portable devices must be removable and replaceable by the user. For disposable vapes, the new rules mean a de facto ban from January 2027. The Tobacco Products Directive (TPD), which is in revision until 2025/2026 and projected to be implemented by 2027/2028, may encourage the spread of flavor bans (which are already in force in five member states), plain packaging and advertising bans.

    The Tobacco Excise Duty Directive (TED), to be implemented by 2025, is expected to include vaping. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation requires all packaging to be recyclable by 2030. Plastic must contain a minimum percentage of recycled material. Provisions are likely to apply to packaging used by the vaping industry, including e-liquid bottles.

    The upcoming TED, which aims to harmonize taxation of combustible cigarettes among member states based on the purchasing power parity index, was also the subject of a panel discussion. According to leaked information, the revised TED will tax e-liquids with a nicotine content of below 15 mg/mL (including zero nicotine liquids) at 20 percent, or €0.10 ($0.11)/mL, and those above 15 mg/mL at 40 percent, or €0.30/mL. HTPs will be taxed at 55 percent, or €91 per 1,000 sticks, nicotine pouches at 50 percent, or €120/kg, and other nicotine products at 50 percent, the latter two gradually over four years.

    Panelists questioned the objective of the directive, arguing that if it was about health or nicotine, it was illogical to also tax non-nicotine liquids. By failing to follow the risk continuum, tax differentials would merely protect the cigarette trade and worsen the public’s already poor understanding of THR, according to panelists.

    The global novel nicotine market is currently worth an estimated $56 billion, according to Marija Obradovic, head legal analyst at ECigIntelligence. Vape products are the predominant category in North America whereas HTPs are leading in Europe, the Middle East and Africa region and the Asia-Pacific region.

    Nicotine pouches are steadily growing but face a fragmented regulatory framework in the EU. In several countries, among them Estonia, the Czech Republic and Sweden, they are regulated, with some states imposing packaging restrictions and requiring health warnings. In Bulgaria and Austria, there is a tax on modern oral nicotine products. For HTPs, a flavor ban will enter into force this October. Obradovic said the regulation will likely lead to more illicit markets, especially in eastern European countries bordering non-EU countries where flavors are not banned. Meanwhile, the number of herbal consumables for HTPs with or without nicotine, a totally unregulated market, has been growing.

    Regulatory Approaches

    When it comes to regulatory policies for RRPs, there are three approaches, as independent consultant Patricia Kovacevic explained. Regulatory science-based policies rely primarily on premarket notification with some elements of product science or standards. The EU TPD notification scheme is an example of this approach. Advantages of this stance include faster and more accessible market entry and a more diverse range of manufacturers, importers and products. Due to distinctions among national legislation, however, consistent success of electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS) as a consumer product is impeded, and the approach does not include an element of scientific communication of the risk continuum. As flavor bans show, it is not always science-based.

    By contrast, regulatory policies based on product science authorize market entry upon scientific review, including a comparative risk profile of products. The unit-by-unit review prevails in the U.S. under the Tobacco Control Act. While the approach is protective of the individual and, to some extent, public health, and robust science will eventually lead to a favorable outcome, it is a time-consuming, prohibitively complex, expensive and anticompetitive process that results in a limited number of products concentrated with a few large players, likely resulting in deceleration in harm reduction, according to Kovacevic.

    The third approach—no effective premarket requirements—is followed by a dwindling number of countries. It allows easy market access but is not protective of public health. There are no standards and no oversight of product ingredients or functionalities. A regulatory approach that best serves THR, Kovacevic summarized, would include proportional and science-based product design, ingredients and manufacturing standards, reasonable liberties to communicate with adult consumers and would consider distribution, retail and age verification.

    Regarding the future of global ENDS regulation, this November will see the 10th conference of the parties (COP10) to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), to be staged in Panama. Jeannie Cameron, CEO of JCIC International, told the audience about the mechanisms behind the gathering’s decision-making, which takes place by consensus, not vote, and what to expect from the meeting. As the COP10 Bureau, the body that will be writing the agenda, consists of representatives of six countries, most of which have banned vaping, a pro-THR approach is unlikely.

    Key issues on the FCTC agenda will likely include bringing novel nicotine products into the FCTC remit, a redefinition of smoke that includes aerosols, restriction of nicotine delivery and bans on nicotine salts in vaping products. COP10 will also discuss nicotine addiction, environmental issues and illicit trade.

    As only governments have a say at the meeting, they will have to determine their views beforehand. Cameron recommended that to prepare for Panama, business and consumer advocates should contact small business and health committee members of Parliament, respectively, while political advocates should coordinate with like-minded countries.

    Making Adjustments

    In a presentation, Marina Murphy, director of scientific and medical affairs at ANDS, demonstrated that nicotine is not the evil substance anti-THR advocates make it out to be.

    There is evidence that nicotine, an alkaloid like caffeine, could have a neuroprotective effect, she noted. Murphy pointed out that in nicotine product regulation, lawmakers apply widely varying standards, with cigarettes being regulated based on what comes out and e-cigarettes being regulated on what comes in, for example. With the WHO promoting nicotine flux—the rate at which nicotine flows from the mouth end of an e-cigarette per puff second—as a new regulatory target, she said it is time for the industry to reframe nicotine.

    Righting misperceptions derived from flawed science can be helpful in this regard. Rosalia Emma, assistant professor at the Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine at the University of Catania, reported on the Replica project at the Center of Excellence for Acceleration of Harm Reduction (COeHAR), in which researchers between 2019 and 2022 replicated the most relevant international studies and unequivocally demonstrated the reduced toxicity of e-cigarettes and HTPs. With Replica 2.0, a new phase of research has started this year, which repeats a study by Fetterman that suggested that flavorings in tobacco products induce endothelial cell dysfunction.

    In contrast to the Fetterman study, COeHAR’s preliminary results show no significant differences in cell viability between PG/VG and PG/VG with vanillin. Reviewing recent literature about emission characterization, Sebastien Soulet, an engineer at Ingesciences, concluded that the contested studies used devices with high power and low airflow. He said that the condition of use should be investigated by researchers as there was a lack of information in many commissions and committees, including those that put together the FCTC’s nineth report, or the SCHEER report.

    Compared to other age-restricted consumer products, such as combustible cigarettes or alcohol, vape products face a stronger regulatory, often prohibitionist stance, mainly because of the flavors involved—although these are also common in alcoholic beverages, according to speakers at the Amsterdam event. To make their products less prone to attack, panelists argued, the industry should behave more responsibly in the design and description of their products to prevent them from attracting youths. It should also develop a nomenclature to rule out violations, they suggested.

    Rather than raising taxes on vape products, regulators should step up enforcement against retailers selling to youth, according to speakers. No longer subject to EU requirements, the U.K. should also consider allowing larger tank sizes, they suggested. This would make vapor products less appealing to youth due to higher prices.

    The Flavor Issue

    The conference also tackled the issue of flavors. In her Tobacco Products Prevalence Study, Andrea Patton, behavioral epidemiologist and head of prevalence research at the Centre for Substance Use Research, modelled the impact of an ENDS flavor ban on U.S. youth and adult users, developing two scenarios. Under the first, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration would ban all flavors except tobacco; under the second, the agency would ban all flavors except tobacco and menthol.

    According to the study, the first scenario would result in a 31 percent reduction of vaping among current adult cigarette users while the second scenario would yield a 21 percent reduction. In both scenarios, participants stated that they would start using tobacco. Flavor, Patton concluded, was the main driver for quitting cigarettes. By contrast, only 5 percent of youths said that they vaped only because of flavors; the main reasons cited for vaping were anxiety, stress or depression. A flavor ban would thus not affect youth use as intended, according to Patton, who also stressed the importance for studies on youth use to look beyond the brand level.

    Citing research by Konstantinos Farsalinos, Michael Landl, director of the World Vapers’ Alliance, explained the importance of flavors. Most vapers, Farsalinos’ work showed, use flavors other than tobacco. Over time, they will get “flavor fatigue” and hence need a variety of flavors. Flavor bans, he argued, won’t work as they make vaping less attractive to smokers, imply a never-ending “war on drugs” mentality and drive consumers to the black market.

    In Estonia, where flavors have been banned since 2020, 58 percent of vapers still use flavors, he said—a real-life experience the Netherlands should have considered before enacting a similar ban. A flavor ban wouldn’t prevent youth uptake either, Landl argued, as most adolescents consumed nicotine for relief of psychological stress. To solve this problem, he asked politicians to improve the socioeconomic conditions and create better opportunities for disadvantaged adolescents.

    Richard Young, principal toxicologist at Bibra Toxicology Advice and Consulting, identified aspects that vape manufacturers need to consider when carrying out assessing their products under TPD rules. He recommended getting a toxicologist involved early in the process—doing more extensive toxicity assessments, comparing acceptable levels or thresholds of toxicological concern for each ingredient to appropriate consumer exposures and documenting hazard and risk assessment clearly.

    What THR Also Means

    Credit: Smithers

    Three speakers shared their personal experiences with THR. Tom Gleeson, trustee of the New Nicotine Alliance Ireland, related how he, a smoker of 35 years, successfully quit within two days 12 years ago by trying an early vape product. 

    Flora Okereke, head of global regulatory insights and foresights at BAT, said that to her, a better future is to use and enjoy nicotine with little or no health impact, which she described as an achievable goal. Okereke made clear that leaving cigarettes, the cash cow for the tobacco industry, to an uncertain future was a bold step for a cigarette manufacturer. She called on the industry to unite and send a unified message to policy regulators. The industry, Okereke said, needed to use COP10 as an opportunity to shape where the industry will be heading.

    Liam Humberstone, technical director at Totally Wicked, described his company’s strategy to deal with the waste created by disposable vapes. According to Nielsen, the U.K.’s single-use vape market was worth £1.12 billion ($1.38 billion) in May 2023, corresponding to 200 million pieces sold each year. In addition, there are an estimated 300 million illegal products.

    Totally Wicked promises consumers it will take back any device of any brand, even illegal vapes. Products are recycled through some of the country’s few authorized treatment facilities, as their batteries are hazardous waste that needs separating. He pointed out that reducing, reusing and recycling makes sense—a lithium-ion battery, for instance, can be recharged 150 times to 300 times—but is not yet widely practiced. Concrete steps and appropriate regulations are needed to improve the situation, he claimed.

    New Technologies

    One way to accelerate THR is to offer licensed e-cigarettes on prescription. According to Ian Fearon of WhatIF? Consulting, doctors could prescribe vapes instead of less effective nicotine-replacement therapies. The best places for the medical licensing pathway, according to Fearon, are the U.K. and the U.S. Pete Lomas, managing consultant of product realization at Broughton, explained in detail what it takes to develop an ENDS product for medicinal licensing.

    The ENDS Conference also highlighted innovative technologies. Stefanie Scheffler, scientist at the Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine, presented a novel device for standardized e-liquid testing. Capable of producing a defined and adjustable temperature, the prototype eliminates the influence of the vaping device on aerosol emissions and creates more safety for the user, independent from the e-cigarette used.

    Scientific Horizons Consulting launched a new puff-recording ENDS that allows researchers to assess real-world user behaviors in real time. According to the company’s principal scientist, Xiang Gao, a two-month observation study revealed that users had vastly varying, complex and nonlinear puff behavior patterns.

  • IEVA Joins InterTobac With VIP Lounge for Members

    IEVA Joins InterTobac With VIP Lounge for Members

    The Independent European Vape Alliance has partnered with InterTabac and InterSupply to exhibit and support the event’s seminar program.

    According to a press release, the IEVA will have its own space for the first time at InterTabac and InterSupply at the end of September.

    This will comprise a dedicated exhibition area and an exclusive lounge for IEVA members only, and the association will also contribute to “maintaining the high quality of the supporting program” with a high-caliber discussion panel.

    Sabine Loos, managing director of Westfalenhallen Unternehmensgruppe which owns and operates the Messe Dortmund venue where InterTobac and Intersupply are held, said the organization is delighted to welcome the IEVA as a new partner.

    “The collaboration underlines the importance of our events and the international reputation they enjoy. I’m convinced the IEVA’s proposition will be a valuable enrichment, especially for representatives of the vaping industry that is performing well despite a difficult overall environment,” said Loos.

    Dustin Dahlmann, IEVA chairman, said his group is looking forward to the opportunity to present the messages of the responsible vaping industry to a wide international audience.

    “The IEVA is committed to a nuanced public perception and regulation of e-cigarettes as a harm-reducing alternative to smoking, and InterTabac and InterSupply provide the right forum for publicizing this further – in 2023 and at future editions of the twin shows,” he said.

  • Vape Korea Expo Set to Return for Second Year

    Vape Korea Expo Set to Return for Second Year

    Credit: Kampon

    In 2022, Vape Korea Expo was the first and largest e-cigarette exhibition in Korea. The event drew the attention of e-cigarette consumers worldwide. The Korean e-cigarette market has been growing faster than expected year over year, despite controversy and issues over the safety of vaping products and government regulation.

    The event is scheduled to take place from July 21st to 23rd at KINTEX, one of Korea’s major exhibition venues.

    Vape Korea Expo is returning for 2023 and expects to showcase the latest in vaping hardware, e-liquids, oils and accessories. The show combines B2C retail, commercial, and entertainment elements with a Trends Symposium and an E-Cigarette Art Exhibition, according to a press release.

    There will also be a number of networking events including B2B buyer meetings and VIP receptions during the show.

    “Vape Korea Expo provides a unique platform for Korean and international brands, manufacturers, distributors, retailers and e-cigarette consumers to meet and interact with each other,” the release states. “Korea Vape Show (KOVAS 2023) is gaining recognition as a paradise for vape enthusiasts, attracting the attention of the vape community centered around Northeast Asia.”

    Registering in advance on the KOVAS 2023 website, www.koreavape.show, before 6:00 PM on July 20th, admission. For more detailed information and inquiries, please contact the Korea Vape Show (KOVAS 2023) office is free.

  • TMA to Host TPMP Workshop Open to All Industry

    TMA to Host TPMP Workshop Open to All Industry

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    TMA is collaborating with EAS Consulting Group to host a one-day workshop on tobacco product manufacturing practices (TPMPs) on Tuesday, June 13, 2023, from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency Crystal City at Reagan National Airport.

    The workshop will include expert speakers from manufacturers, suppliers and law firms to give a balanced and comprehensive analysis of the proposed regulation, its impact on business and the ability to hear shared experiences.

    The event is open to all industry stakeholders interested in attending, though space is limited.

    Registration is currently open.

  • FEELM Scores Major Awards at 2023 Vaper Expo UK

    FEELM Scores Major Awards at 2023 Vaper Expo UK

    The China-based closed-pod system solution provider FEELM took home several awards from the Vapouround 2023 annual awards ceremony in Birmingham, during the Vaper Expo UK event held May 12th – 14th.

    The atomization technology company won both the Outstanding Contribution to the Vape Industry and Best Manufacturer awards. FEELM clients KIWI Go and DejaVoo Cyber also garnered awards, winning first and second place in the “Best Disposable” category respectively.

    Additionally, FEELM, a subsidiary of Smoore International, the world’s largest vaping company, client RELX won the award for “Best Closed Pod System” for its Infinity device.

    The Vapouround Awards is an annual awards dinner for the global vaping industry. All winning brands are selected by a panel of professional judges and represent the outstanding performance of the past year in various segments of the industry.

    FEELM is not new to winning in the Vapouround Awards, with the brand having been awarded Industry Leader and Best Innovation in 2020.

    The atomization solutions provider has made notable achievements in the closed-pod system category, with around 3.5 million pods sold to more than 50 countries since 2018, according to a press release. Its disposable ceramic coil technologies have also already been launched in key markets including France, the UK, and Belgium, and will soon be available more widely in more countries.

    A FEELM representative stated that the company has been dedicated to embracing innovations with the “aim of taking the industry standard to new heights. While most of the 2ml e-liquid disposable products provide only 600 puffs, FEELM Max solutions can now deliver 800 puffs, all whilst remaining TPD-compliant.”

    During the event, FEELM also unveiled its new innovative disposable solution, FEELM Max.

    “FEELM Max offers more puffs, greater taste consistency, and a fully visible mouthpiece to measure e-liquid, making it the best disposable available whilst still ensuring regulatory compliance with the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations (TRPR) in the UK and the Tobacco Products Directive (TPD) in the EU,” the representative stated.

    FEELM Max is now available in markets including the UK, Italy and Germany.

  • Zinwi to Hold Flavoring Event at UK Vapor Expo

    Zinwi to Hold Flavoring Event at UK Vapor Expo

    Zinwi Biotech, a major Chinese e-liquid manufacturer, has announced it will bring its Good Flavor products to the UK Vaper Expo from May 12 – 14 in Birmingham. Attendees of the occasion will have the opportunity to witness firsthand Zinwi’s Good Flavor and will be able to customize their own flavors during the event.

    “Zinwi’s products are known to be equivalent to three keywords in the industry: high return to flavor, high smoothness and high stability,” stated to a Zinwi spokesperson. “The primary reason behind the ‘high return to flavor’ characteristic is the stringent fragrance selection process.”

    The “high return to flavor” concept is the requirement that each component of Zinwi’s e-liquids to have the highest levels of quality and purity. One of the most important components of an e-liquid is fragrance and the fragrance selection process begins in Quality Control where Zinwi analyzes a fragrance’s physical and chemical indicators and the legality of the components used, according to the spokesperson.

    “It is then followed by our sensory evaluation team to evaluate the richness and purity level of the fragrances,” the spokesperson said. “The samples and the finished products will then be evaluated by Quality Control to ensure the highest level of quality of the e-liquid after the fragrances have been added to the products in the testing and manufacturing stage.”

    Another reason Zinwi’s e-liquid has an enhanced flavor profile is the company’s Atomization Technology Research Center, which has self-developed nicotine salts and the sweeteners used in the e-liquids to ensure the highest quality of those components of the e-liquid formula, according to the spokesperson.

    “Nicotine salt has been delicately developed taking into close consideration the stirring time, the temperature, and the amount of nicotine added in combination with other components such as benzoic acid. The diverse range of sweeteners are also developed to match different vaping devices, for example, different puff-range disposable devices and ceramic core vaping devices,” the spokesperson explained.

    “Sweeteners can easily affect the flavor either to be ‘too sweet’ or ‘not enough sweet.’ Having a diverse range of sweeteners can avoid the “too sweet” or “not enough sweet” challenge and help the finished products to maintain the ‘high return to flavor’ characteristic.”

    Additionally, Zinwi’s flavoring team are some of the most experienced in the industry. Apart from flavorist’s own flavoring experiences, Zinwi’s flavoring team together has created over 50, 000 formulas, and hundreds more are added every day on average.

    “Zinwi’s good flavor products are not attributed by one single factor,” said the spokesperson. “It is the combined factors including the raw materials selection, the self-developed e-liquid components such as nicotine salts and sweeteners, the quality control procedures and the well-trained flavoring team that guarantee the good flavor.”

    Established in 2016 and headquartered in the Guangming District of Shenzhen, China, Zinwi Biotech is a high-tech company that specializes in providing integrated e-liquid solutions including R&D, production and sales services to global e-cigarette manufacturers and brands. Due to its strong R&D capabilities, stringent quality control procedures and premium client network, Zinwi has become the world’s leading integrated e-liquid solutions provider.

  • AVM to Hold Public Forum With CTP Director King

    AVM to Hold Public Forum With CTP Director King

    Brian King / Credit: FDA

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products Director Brian King will participate in an open discussion with the vaping industry in late February.

    The virtual event will be moderated by American Vapor Manufacturers Association (AVM) legislative director Gregory Conley and newly-named AVM vice president Allison Boughner.

    “The Future of Vaping in the US: A Conversation with FDA’s Dr. Brian King” will be held on Feb. 24 at 1:00 p.m. EST, and is open to the public. Participants must register in advance, and AVM has provided an opportunity to submit questions for King.

    King has been quiet since memos recently submitted to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit show that he reversed a recommended marketing approval of Logic Technology’s menthol vaping products, ignoring the advice of FDA scientists, according to Logic’s lawyers. 

  • Smoore Subsidiary FEELM Recognized at UKVIA Event

    Smoore Subsidiary FEELM Recognized at UKVIA Event

    Smoore’s atomization technology platform, FEELM, won an award for innovation and was commended for its sustainability initiatives during the U.K. Vaping Industry Association’s (UKVIA) industry forum on Nov. 18.

    The Best Innovation in the Vaping Industry award recognizes FEELM’s breakthrough technologies, including its ceramic coil disposable pod solution, FEELM Max.

    Among other improvements, FEELM Max offers more puffs than other coil technologies with the same e-liquid volume. Its constant output control and flavor lock technologies ensure a high degree of flavor consistency while preventing dry burning. FEELM also established multiple laboratories to help clients comply with stringent industry regulations, including those issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

    The UKVIA Sustainable Vaping commendation recognized FEELM’s accomplishments in sustainable advanced technologies, responsible marketing and environmental stewardship. In 2019, FEELM created a groundbreaking environmentally friendly disposable electronic atomization device, for example. This year, FEELM developed an environmentally friendly zero nicotine e-atomization device.

    Recently, the company committed to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050, and its automated factory has adopted an energy management system to decrease carbon emissions while increasing energy efficiency.

    “We are delighted to have won the innovation award and been commended in the sustainability category, and we are honored by the recognition the UKVIA has given us,” said FEELM Europe Division Director Echo Liu.

    “A number of leading vaping brands are driven by FEELM, and our vaping devices loaded with our atomizer technology are now being exported to over 50 countries and regions.

    “FEELM can only realize its corporate vision—’atomization makes life better’—by being sustainable and creating value for society. Every day we move a step closer to this goal by creating sustainable advanced technologies and products, using responsible marketing, and embracing a greener future.”