Wolf in sheep’s clothing! British American Tobacco (BAT) set to test iFuse tobacco/vapour hybrid

in the press

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uk and one world thumbBritish American Tobacco (BAT) plans to test a hybrid product that combines tobacco and e-cigarette technology in a European market, a senior executive said on Wednesday. The product, called iFuse, will use elements of the company’s Kent brand, and be sold in a market where Kent cigarettes are popular. Executives declined to say precisely which market that will be. The test is the latest in a line of cigarette alternatives sold by big tobacco firms like Philip Morris International, Imperial Tobacco and Japan Tobacco, who are jostling for position in an emerging category and trying to offset the decline of the tobacco market.
Excluding China and the United States, the market for so-called ‘next generation products’ is worth £2.8 billion ($4.3 billion) BAT said. It is expected to grow to £8.4 billion by 2020, but would still be a fraction of the global cigarette market, worth more than 450 billion pounds. Like an e-cigarette, the iFuse heats nicotine-laced liquid into an inhalable vapour, but the vapour passes through a bit of tobacco near the tip that imparts flavour, said Kingsley Wheaton, BAT’s managing director of next generation products. Philip Morris also has a tobacco-based vapour product that uses what it calls Marlboro Heatsticks. The companies say the products are less dangerous than conventional cigarettes because they avoid the burning that causes the release of deadly chemicals.
Relative to BAT’s other tobacco-only vapour product, the iFuse is “simpler to use, more compact, more convenient, neater, cleaner and probably attracts a lower excise position” Wheaton said. Excise tax is often calculated using the amount of tobacco. BAT’s other cigarette alternatives include the Vype e-cigarette and the Voke nicotine inhaler, which is licensed as a stop-smoking product. In the traditional cigarette business, BAT and its peers are challenging a new law being imposed by the UK government that would require plain packaging for all tobacco products. The measure is meant to reduce the lure of smoking, particularly among youngsters, by removing bright colours and logos. The companies claim the law infringes on their intellectual property. BAT expects a six-day hearing with the UK High Court to start on 10 December. View full article

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Martinne Geller (18 November 2015) British American to test tobacco/e-cigarette hybrid [editorial]. Retrieved from http://ow.ly/UOqIw

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