PMI donating ventilators
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Greece
STOP (Stopping Tobacco Organizations and Products) has been producing a regular COVID-19 Monitoring Brief detailing the trends and patterns of tobacco industry behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic. You can now access all of this monitoring data via the Tobacco industry COVID-19 monitoring database on this page.
Discover how the tobacco industry has used Corporate Social Responsibility to protect profits during the pandemic in this TobaccoTactics explainer:
The COVID-19 pandemic is of particular relevance to the tobacco industry due to the nature of the disease. It is a viral infection of the lungs that can be severe and fatal. A host of tobacco-related conditions have been identified as associated risk factors for severe forms of COVID-19, including respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.=1 and the WHO has found that “smoking is associated with increased severity of disease and death in hospitalized COVID-19 patients”.2 Tobacco products and their associated health risks have therefore received negative attention.3
In addition to the disease itself, the resulting changes in global society, with lockdowns and social distancing imposed across much of the globe, have had cascading economic effects for many industries. As Philip Morris International (PMI) told investors:
“The COVID-19 pandemic has created significant societal and economic disruption, and resulted in closures of stores, factories and offices, and restrictions on manufacturing, distribution and travel, all of which will adversely impact our business, results of operations, cash flows and financial position during the continuation of the pandemic.”.4
The science of COVID-19 and smoking is a rapidly evolving area of research. The latest developments are best covered in ‘living reviews’ of the evidence such as The Union’s SCIENTIFIC BRIEF ON SMOKING AND COVID-19 and University College London’s living rapid evidence review or the WHO’s Smoking and COVID-19 Scientific Brief.
The extent of tobacco industry involvement in research into COVID-19 and smoking is still unclear, though there are recorded instances of scientists with historical and contemporary financial links to the tobacco industry publishing COVID-19 related research without declaring these tobacco industry links.5 In such cases the research has tended to relate to the ‘Nicotine Hypothesis’ (see below for more detail) that nicotine offers protection from COVID-19 infection. This hypothesis is supported by research, published primarily on non-peer reviewed preprint publishing platforms such as Qeios, that indicates smokers are less likely to catch COVID-19.6
One such paper, first published without peer review in medRxiv, was later published by the European Respiratory Journal, only to be retracted in March 2021 when the journal became aware that three of the authors, Mier, Sussman and Poulas, had failed to declare their links to the tobacco industry.6 Other large scale population studies, not linked to the tobacco industry, have found that smokers are at increased risk of developing COVID-19 symptoms.7 The current scientific consensus is that smokers with COVID-19 have higher a risk of severe disease and death.8
Influencing the scientific debate, as seen with COVID-19, is an historical tobacco industry tactic. A key aim in influencing science is the creation of doubt around a given topic, be it the impact of second-hand smoke, links to diseases or newly arising public health issues. Calls that ‘more research is needed’ prevent the timely implementation of regulation, draw out the debate and confuse policymakers and the public. The tactic has been employed since its suggestion by PR firm Hill and Knowlton in 1953. Doubt creation is enabled by the commission and funding of research that fits the preferred industry narrative.9 The industry also exerts influence over science by ghost writing articles and research and covertly funding scientists, as was the case with PMI’s White Coat Project, which sought to “restore social acceptability of smoking”.10
Many of these tactics are apparent in the industry response to COVID-19:
For information on the science of smoking and COVID-19, and examples of industry influenced research see The Union’s scientific briefs.
The “Nicotinic Hypothesis” paper was initially published as a Qeios preprint (an online scientific publication platform where early results are published without peer-review).16 and later in the journal Comptes Rendus Biologies.17 Its lead author was Jean-Pierre Changeux, Emeritus Professor of Neuroscience at the Institut Pasteur, Professor in the chair of Cellular Communications at the Collège de France and Honorary President of the Neuroscience Department at Institut Pasteur.18 Prof Changeux has, among many funders in his long and distinguished career, historic links with the tobacco industry:
There is no suggestion that the “Nicotine Hypothesis” paper was funded by the tobacco industry or that Prof Changeux has any current tobacco industry links.
The industry has investments in biotechnology companies and pharmaceuticals, some of which are involved in COVID-19 vaccine development. This includes BAT subsidiary Kentucky Bioprocessing and PMI subsidiary Medicago. These investments are part of the tobacco industry’s business strategy as well as making tobacco companies appear “part of the solution”.25 and may represent “one of the most successful corporate public relations strategies ever mounted by a tobacco company.” according to tobacco control experts Cohen and Chapman.26
For examples of tobacco industry involvement in vaccine development see the COVID-19 monitoring database and Tobacco Company Investments in Pharmaceutical & NRT Products page. The examples in the database are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published since April 2020.
The tobacco industry has long used “corporate social responsibility” (CSR), as a strategy to gain legitimacy, increase public trust and advance its business interests. Tobacco companies invest in wide range of causes, including sustainability, environmental and human rights NGOs, universities and art institutions. The WHO denounces tobacco industry CSR involvement as “an inherent contradiction”. Article 5.3 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) explicitly bans such activity and its promotion.27
CSR is also used as a strategy by tobacco companies to facilitate access to policymakers, break down opposition and promote voluntary regulation.28
The tobacco industry makes a point of announcing donations made in the wake of disasters around the world. Targeted donations such as these have been critiqued as “crisis-washing” (similar to “greenwashing”) the actions of corporations, like tobacco companies, whose business actively produces social and health harms.29 The outbreak of COVID-19 is no exception to the tobacco industry’s historic attempts to take advantage of disasters to promote its own CSR agenda and products.
For examples of targeted donations and CSR from the tobacco industry during the pandemic see the COVID-19 monitoring database. These examples are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published since April 2020.
The safety of tobacco workers in factories, tobacco farms, auctions and markets has been questioned throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Increased pressure and interference from the tobacco industry to reopen factories, or to persist with production against the advice of health authorities, has increasingly placed their staff at risk. This has resulted in quarantines, positive COVID-19 tests and deaths. STOP, ASH US and GGTC have all spoken out on the risks to tobacco workers during the pandemic.30
For examples of tobacco worker’s rights violations during the pandemic see the COVID-19 monitoring database. These examples are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published since April 2020.
As governments have looked to introduce different regulations on tobacco products to reduce smoking prevalence, so the tobacco industry has fought to delay or derail such initiatives. If regulations are proposed then the industry will use a variety of arguments to argue that they are not necessary, will cost jobs, will be counter-productive or are illegal. The fall-back position is often that such regulations should be voluntary and written in conjunction with the industry, even though that is in violation of Article 5.3.
Once the regulations have been introduced then the industry will look to undermine their effectiveness by questioning what benefits they bring, seek legal challenges or use the legislative process to amend them.31 A good example of this are the regulations on plain packaging introduced by a number of countries.
The industry has deployed the same tactics in the context of the global COVID-19 pandemic. The industry and its allies have challenged classifications of “essential” business and lobbied for shops and factories to remain open and for cigarette production to continue during the pandemic. Tobacco companies have also lobbied governments to reverse regulatory decisions to ban cigarette sales under international COVID-19 lockdowns and successfully delayed major tobacco control measures.
For examples of lobbying, policy and regulation interference from the tobacco industry during the pandemic see the COVID-19 monitoring database. These examples are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published since April 2020.
For further information on tobacco bans and regulation see GGTC’s country list of bans.
Tobacco companies have used the COVID-19 pandemic as a marketing opportunity to promote their brands via social media promotion and CSR.323334
For examples of tobacco industry brand marketing during the pandemic see here. These examples are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published in the 12 months since April 2020.
Like most businesses, the pandemic has been a turbulent time for the tobacco industry. Early shutdowns of all but essential industries impacted tobacco companies and lead to lobbying in Brazil and Russia to reopen tobacco factories. In South Africa the ban on tobacco and alcohol between April and August 2020 impacted sales and resulted in a court case between BAT and the government. Calls to tax the industry to pay for the health costs of the pandemic also had the potential to affect tobacco profits.35 PMI in its 2020 Q1 earnings report was concerned that “messaging about the potential negative impacts of the use of our products on COVID-19 risks may lead to increasingly restrictive regulatory measures on the sale and use of our products”. Despite these concerns, PMI’s end of year results reported a “robust 2020 performance” of sales volume being down and that the “negative COVID impact on industry volumes [would] reverse over 2021-22”.36
For more examples of how tobacco industry business has been impacted during COVID-19 see the COVID-19 monitoring database. These examples are taken from our COVID-19 monitoring briefs published since April 2020.
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PMI donating ventilators
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Greece
BAT Bangladesh donating PPE and hand sanitiser
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangladesh
Producing PPE
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI and Parallax
Country(s): USA and Canada
Donated 400 face masks to Cavite hospital
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMFTC
Country(s): Philippines
Donated hand sanitiser and face masks
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Nigeria
Partnered with companies to produce 300,000 litres of hand sanitiser
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Kenya
Donated 100,000 hand gels
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Georgia
Donated $2.1million Reias to invest in actions to address coronavirus and 600 litres of sanitising alcohol
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Brazil
Donated €1million to Red Cross in Romania
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Romania
Donated 320,000 leva for medicines and protective equipment
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Bulgaria
Johann Rupert contributed R1 billion to SA government for small businesses
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT and FMF
Country(s): South Africa
Donated ₹25 lakh to India government for COVID-19 relief
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Deccan Tobacco Company
Country(s): India
State-run tobacco company donated $1million to COVID-19 relief
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Regie
Country(s): Lebanon
Rwandan businessman, owner of Meridian Tobacco Company and Chair of the Pan African Tobacco Group donated money to Ugandan government for COVID-19 relief
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Meridian Tobacco Company and Pan African Tobacco Group
Country(s): Uganda
A regional governor has requested pandemic donations from BAT
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Nigeria
JTI donated money to a hardship fund for independent retailers
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): UK
Vinataba donated money and equipment to the Vietnam Heart Institute at Bach Mai Hospital
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Vinataba
Country(s): Vietnam
Indian Tobacco Company delivering their food brands to homes
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Indian Tobacco Company
Country(s): India
BAT highlighted it’s CSR and COVID-19 work plan in an open letter to the public from Chief Executive Jack Bowles
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
Altria highlighted their COVID-19 CSR and general organisational plans in an Annual General Meeting
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Altria
Country(s): Global
PMI highlighted their COVID-19 CSR and general organisational plans in an Annual General Meeting, including reported over $30 million in CSR donations
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
PMI donated 40,000 N95 face masks to the government
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Costa Rica
Donated $82,0000 worth of COVID-19 test kits to Indonesia
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): South Korean Tobacco Company and KT&G
Country(s): Indonesia
Donated $90,000 to COVID-19 relief efforts in Kentucky, USA
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Altria
Country(s): USA
Donated over $150,000 to Turkish COVID-19 relief funds
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Turkey
Donated over $650,000 to Turkish COVID-19 relief funds
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Turkey
PMI Sampoerna in Indonesia, where factory workers died from COVID-19, have been donating to local pandemic relief via an NGO: The Social Transformation and Public Awareness Foundation (STAPA) Center
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI Sampoerna
Country(s): Indonesia
In Kentucky, Altria (aka Philip Morris USA) have donated $35,000 to community support group United Way, stating that “The funds are part of a $1 million commitment by Altria to address emergent needs in its headquarters community of Richmond, Virginia, and its other manufacturing and grower communities.”
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Altria
Country(s): USA
Following accusations of exploiting the pandemic through CSR donations, both PMI and Imperial Tobacco have responded by saying they were asked to donate ventilators in Greece and Ukraine, that such donations are not a breach of the WHO FCTC (article 5.3 of the FCTC specifically addresses industry social responsibility) and that they are not promoting donations to the public, despite evidence to the contrary
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI and Imperial Tobacco
Country(s): Greece and Ukraine
Bangalore public officials publicly thanked Indian Tobacco Company Limited (ITC) for their lockdown deliveries of ITC food products
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Indian Tobacco Company
Country(s): India
South Korean tobacco company KT&G have donated a total of 7,600 COVID-19 diagnostic kits to Russia and Turkey
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): KT&G
Country(s): Russia and Turkey
Reemtsma, a subsidiary of Imperial Tobacco, has paid for accommodation for 250 homeless people in Hamburg, Germany
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Imperial Tobacco subsidiary Reemtsma
Country(s): Germany
JTI donated 150,000 USD worth of PPE supplies to schools and clinics
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Zambia
PMI has donated medical supplies to a hospital in Jalisco, Mexico, with government Trade and Health ministers present during the donation event
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Mexico
A report by The Niche Newspaper, Nigeria details the marketing and CSR campaigns by tobacco companies to take advantage of the pandemic and compares the tactic to industry behaviour during the Ebola epidemic
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Nigeria
Academic research by Girvalaki et al. from the European Network for Smoking and Tobacco Prevention, details the industries CSR activity in Europe, describing it as a ‘trojan horse’, urging governments to uphold Article 5.3 of the WHO FCTC
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Europe
WHO has launched a programme to help 1.3 billion people quit during COVID-19. The programme began in Jordan with donations of 37,800 nicotine patches from Johnson and Johnson
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): WHO and Johnson and Johnson
Country(s): Jordan
PMI, along with 10 other partners including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, have launched a campaign to raise awareness of the trade in fraudulent personal protective equipment for COVID-19. They cite their experience in combatting the illicit tobacco trade as reason for involvement. The industry, including PMI, has a history of profiting from tobacco smuggling and attempting to control tobacco track and trace programmes
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
In Zambia, a local leader has publicly thanked JTI for its recent donation of US$ 150,000
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Zambia
A COVID-19 testing scheme in the Philippines is being partly funded by Universal Leaf , supplier of tobacco to PMI in the Philippines
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Universal Leaf and PMI
Country(s): Philippines
BAT is promoting its partnership with McLaren Racing by praising McLaren’s production of ventilators and medical supplies during COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
PMI stated that it has donated over US$30 million during the crisis
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
In Egypt, PMI have reported donations of COVID-19 medical supplies worth roughly US$120,000
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Egypt
Angolan tobacco manufacturer Barco Trading Company (Angola) and the Pan Africa Tobacco Group have been promoting their COVID-19 CSR conducted in collaboration with Angolan authorities
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Barco Trading Company and Pan Africa Tobacco Group
Country(s): Angola
A PMI funded COVID-19 field hospital in Brazil has closed due to a lack of use
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Brazil
PMI Vietnam have said they champion female leadership in the company during COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Vietnam
Shehzad Munim, Managing Director of BAT Bangladesh, has promoted the company in a local newspaper interview, saying they protected workers jobs and maintained cigarette supply to customers
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangladesh
PMI continue to use the pandemic as a greenwashing opportunity, taking part in the Asia Sustainability Conference to discuss improving air quality and cutting down carbon emissions. PMI’s Head of Environmental Sustainability spoke about the company’s commitment to climate action, inspired by the pandemic, saying that PMI aims to make all its factories carbon neutral by 2030
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
At the 35th General Meeting of the International Tobacco Growers Association (ITGA) online event its president highlighted the importance of partnerships with tobacco companies for the sustainability of the tobacco sector and the protection of the supply chain (especially given the global pandemic). Representative from JTI and BAT took part in the event
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT, JTI and ITGA
Country(s): Global
According to a major Greek news company, the Greek Government approached the "big tobacco industry" asking for donations to cover the lack of 5 millon needles and other consumables related to the COVID vaccine
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Government and Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Greece
BAT Bangladesh was awarded the Supply Chain Collaboration and Partnering award at the Bangladesh Supply Chain Excellence Awards 2020 for their pandemic crisis projects aimed at enhancing tobacco farmers livelihood, loss analysis of distributers and suppliers, and partnering with the government for capacity building
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangladesh
Imperial Tobacco Canada, a wholly-owned subsidiary of BAT, in response to the ongoing province-wide shut down in Québec sent out “wellness boxes” to employees and has organised “Meal Prep Mondays” and “Wellness Wednesdays” to provide support for employees working from home. Imperial Tobacco Canada has been recognised as one of Montreal’s Top Employers in 2021
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT subsidiary Imperial Tobacco Canada
Country(s): Canada
The state-owned tobacco enterprise Libanaise Des Tabacs Et Tombacs (Regie) provided respiratory assist devices to its employees, and their dependents, infected with COVID
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Regie
Country(s): Lebanon
BAT gave a presentation on its preliminary results for 2020 stating it was “supporting communities with testing equipment, 3D printers, & medical & hygiene equipment” and “partnering with leaf growing communities to support water supply and sanitation” through the pandemic
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
BAT has warned of a combined 7% drop in sales volume of cigarette and heated tobacco products in response to COVID-19. The company highlighted strict lockdown measures in Mexico, Argentina and South Africa as being particularly damaging to business alongside reduced sales in airports
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
Industry profits in emerging cigarette markets have been particularly affected by the pandemic, such as in Bangladesh and Vietnam
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Bangladesh and Vietnam
These findings mirror fears about declines in sales including duty free sales reported by PMI at its AGM and predictions made about the potential impact of the pandemic on PMI/the tobacco industry
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
The global Heated Tobacco Products market is predicted to grow despite the COVID-19 pandemic, with positive impacts for the major tobacco companies. Analysis from market.us suggests that “aggressively promoting” HTP products as low risk is proving a successful strategy during the pandemic period
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Global
In the USA, the Federal Reserve bought $428 million in corporate bonds from companies including PMI as part of its COVID-19 recovery plan
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): PMI and Federal Reserve
Country(s): USA
BAT stocks have been performing very well, with a report saying “the pandemic hasn’t made much if any difference.”
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
BAT sales are up 22% in Zimbabwe, compared to this time last year, despite 3% drop in sales volume and economic struggles for the country and Zimbabwean tobacco farmers
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Zimbabwe
BAT has reported reduced profits due to COVID-19. In Malaysia profits dropped by 23% in the third quarter of 2020, compared to last year. BAT blamed COVID-19 and illicit tobacco trade.
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Malaysia
In Zimbabwe, BAT reported an 8% decline in sales compared to September 2019
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Zimbabwe
After the tobacco ban was lifted in South Africa in August 2020, research found the market share of BAT, JTI and PMI tobacco manufacturers had fallen
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT, JTI and PMI
Country(s): South Africa
According to officials of Tax Justice South Africa (TJSA), there were six tobacco brands that saw sales soar past the ‘one-million-per-day’ mark during the ban
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): South Africa
Tobacco companies including PMI, JTI, Imperial Brands and Altria Group all raised their sales or profit targets, saying the industry had done better than expected in 2020 mostly in US and EU
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): PMI, JTI, Imperial Brands, Altria
Country(s): USA and Europe
BAT has boosted its revenue outlook for 2020 after COVID-19 had a smaller than expected hit on cigarette demand globally
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
Imperial tobacco reported an increase in revenue from cigarettes due to increased smoking rates during the pandemic
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Imperial Brands
Country(s): Global
The COVID pandemic has been blamed for a 25% drop in cigarette sales in Mexico by BAT executive. The article does not quote official public health sources and promotes IQOS products
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Mexico
Data released by the Ministry of Finance shows tobacco sales fell by a third in the Spanish Balearic Islands due to the State of Emergency and drop in tourists
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Spain
BATSA has stated its sales have rebounded following the lifting of restrictions in August from the South African five-month tobacco ban
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
In the UK, cigarette sales increased by 7% to £12.4bn during lockdown, despite an estimated 1m people quitting smoking
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): UK
BAT Malaysia’s managing director Johnathon Reed has said the company’s performance continues to be undermined by high illicit cigarette volumes and a growth of the illicit vaping market
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Malaysia
PMI used the pandemic to push its heated tobacco product, IQOS, partnering with a delivery app to get the product to people in lockdown
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Russia
The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids have been investigating and reporting instances of tobacco companies using the lockdown and stay at home advice to promote their brands on social media
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): CTFK
Country(s): Global
BAT’s Glo face masks worn by influencers on social media in Kazakhstan
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Kazakhstan
CTFK reports that PMI has referred to COVID-19 on social media to promote special offers and home delivery on its vape products “in at least 18 countries (Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Canada, Greece, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Moldova, Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, UK, and Ukraine)”.
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Global
A report was published on how “The tobacco industry takes advantage of a pandemic despite selling a product that aggravated COVID-19”, which details PMI and BAT social media campaigns promoting deals and free trials on their vape products
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): BAT and PMI
Country(s): Mexico
The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project published its Pandering to a Pandemic report which details PMI’s attempts to use the pandemic as a marketing opportunity for products like IQOS, employing social media promotion and CSR
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): OCCRP and PMI
Country(s): Global
Ethos, a Mexican think tank, published this report on tobacco company marketing during COVID-19, including illegal 80% discounts on products and the industries involvement in the science of COVID-19 and smoking
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): Ethos
Country(s): Mexico
PMFTC (Philippine affiliate of PMI) is using the pandemic to pursue business transformation and provide smokers with non-combustible alternatives through the ‘Unsmoke Pilipinas’ campaign, launched in July 2019
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Philippines
A group of U.S. lawmakers sent letters to BAT and PMI alleging they attempted to “profit off the back of a global health crisis”. The letter states tobacco companies promoted their products during COVID-19 on social media platforms popular with young adults by offering free gifts like hand sanitiser, toilet paper and masks. Some ads pitched nicotine products as good for stress relief during Covid-19
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Brand Marketing
Organisation(s): BAT and PMI
Country(s): Global
The industry has used the pandemic as a chance to criticise public health organisations such as the WHO, often through third parties
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Policy Interference
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Global
WHO has in turn cautioned governments against working with Big Tobacco
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Policy Interference
Organisation(s): WHO
Country(s): Global
Called for vape shops to remain open
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): UKVIA
Country(s): UK
PMI and other industry funding has been linked to much of the pro-vaping pandemic response, with particular criticism from the industry and its allies levelled at New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and Professor Stanton Glantz of the Center for Tobacco Research Control & Education at UCSF
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): USA
Tobacco control advocates have called on the President to impose tobacco product restrictions in response to the pandemic, asking ask for a restriction on industry donations and an increase in tobacco tax and prices
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Tobacco Control Advocates
Country(s): Indonesia
Tobacco was listed as ‘essential’ and the New Zealand Imperial factory remains open
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Imperial
Country(s): New Zealand
Some Indian states have banned chewing and spitting tobacco, backed up by harsh jail sentences. The sale of tobacco has also been banned nationally
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): India
Russia halted tobacco manufacturing. This prompted lobbying from the big four tobacco companies, arguing that it would lead to a growth in illicit trade
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Russia
National government banned all tobacco sales early in the crisis, with some local restrictions being lifted in response to lobbying from industry advocates and BAT, again using the ‘illicit’ argument
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Lobbying, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT and Government
Country(s): South Africa
PMI successfully lobbied to reopen its factory, despite evidence of black-market tax avoidance and an initial restriction on tobacco sales
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Lobbying, Regulation
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Pakistan
PMI maintained cigarette production in Brazil (Santa Cruz do Sol), to avoid “compromising the business”, despite a decree banning non-essential industrial manufacture
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Brazil
42 associations sent a letter to the President of Indonesia urgently appealing to strengthen COVID-19 response by enforcing stronger tobacco control measures
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Tobacco Control
Organisation(s): Tobacco Control Advocates
Country(s): Indonesia
Lobbying the government to remove tobacco from the essential goods list
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Tobacco Control
Organisation(s): Kenya Tobacco Control Alliance
Country(s): Kenya
An open letter was sent to the UN Secretary General signed by over 50 tobacco control groups highlighting the importance of the WHO FCTC and the need to challenge tobacco industry CSR and lobbying in response to tobacco bans
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Tobacco Control
Organisation(s): Tobacco Control Advocates
Country(s): Global
Tobacco manufacture has been halted. The Finance Secretary said he would not relax restrictions on tobacco and alcohol sales during lockdown, after it was suggested that the government was missing out on sin tax revenue due to reduced sales
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Tobacco Industry
Country(s): Philippines
Published a letter in local newspapers calling for their factories to reopen. Restrictions were lifted on May 10 and the company claimed it could restock the nation within one week
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Lobbying, Regulation
Organisation(s): PMI subsidiary Massalin Particulares
Country(s): Argentina
Following BAT’s cessation of legal action, The Fair Trade Independent Tobacco Association (FITA) has paused court proceedings against the South African government
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT and FITA
Country(s): South Africa
JTI has joined other industry members in urging the government to reconsider its tobacco ban
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): South Africa
The government announced a continuation of the ban as they move in to ‘level 3 lockdown’, with the Minister of Co-operative Governance & Traditional Affairs, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, defending the decision in her response to the Fair-Trade Independent Tobacco Association’s (FITA) application to suspend the ban
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT and FITA
Country(s): South Africa
The FITA have said its legal challenge will be heard on the 9th and 10th June. BAT have announced they will be going to court to challenge the extension of the ban and are supported by JTI
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT and FITA
Country(s): South Africa
The Vapour Products Association of South Africa (VPSA) has also criticised the continued ban
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): VPSA
Country(s): South Africa
The tobacco control group, PROGGA in Bangladesh has reported tobacco companies successfully lobbying the Ministry of Industries to reject a suggested tobacco ban proposed by the Health and Family Welfare Ministry. The Ministry of Industries had initially agreed to the Health and Family Welfare Ministry request that companies suspend tobacco production during the pandemic
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): PROGGA
Country(s): Bangladesh
In St. Petersburg, Russia, PMI, BAT and JTI have resumed production after lobbying Prime Minister, Mikhail Mishustin, to include tobacco on the list of essential items during lockdown
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): BAT, JTI and PMI
Country(s): Russia
In the United Arab Emirates, the Federal Tax Authority has delayed bans on water pipe, tobacco and e-cigarettes without digital tax stamps to 2021 in response to stakeholder pressure citing COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): Federal Tax Authority
Country(s): UAE
The court case challenging the controversial tobacco ban brought by the Fair-Trade Independent Tobacco Association (FITA) against the government began on 9th June in Pretoria. Minister of Co-operative Governance & Traditional Affairs, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, said the ban was imposed to “protect human life and health and to reduce the potential strain on the health care system” and was informed by evidence indicating worse outcomes for smokers with COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
FITA have accused the government of failing to consider the implications of such a ban and alongside pro-vape groups, claimed that the ban has bolstered the illicit cigarette trade in South Africa. Exaggeration of illicit trade numbers is a familiar industry tactic, however there has been independent reporting of some increased illicit trade in response to the ban
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Illicit Trade
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
There have been protests at the gates of parliament by those angry with the ban
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
The Guateng High Court in Pretoria dismissed the case brought by the Fair Trade Tobacco Association (FITA) against the tobacco ban. The ban remains in place
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
Judge Mlambo said that they were persuaded by Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma’s arguments that cigarettes are “plainly not food, cleaning and hygiene products, fuel and clearly not medical products. They would constitute ‘essential goods’ only if they could be considered ‘basic goods’ akin to airtime and electricity,” Dlamini Zuma argues that the ban was necessary to protect the health care system. FITA will appeal the decision
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
BAT South Africa is also going to court to challenge the ban, arguing that there have been negative economic impacts and an increase in illicit trade. BAT’s court date has been postponed from June 30 to August 5. BAT described the delay as “inexplicable” amid concerns that smokers will switch to cheaper brands if a recession hits
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
Border patrols between South Africa and Zimbabwe have been increased to combat the rise in cigarette smuggling occurring across the border. Illicit trade expert, ex-South African Revenue Service lawyer, Telita Snyckers, has said “What seems to be the case is that 25% of the current illicit market during the lockdown is being supplied by BAT (British American Tobacco),”. Historically the industry uses smuggling to supply restricted markets
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Illicit Trade
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa and Zimbabwe
The decision to ease COVID-19 restrictions on tobacco waterpipe use by the Minister for Tourism and reportedly encouraged by the hospitality sector has been met by disagreement and a petition against the decision signed by doctors, lawyers and other professionals
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Lebanon
Following the Pretoria High Court’s decision to uphold the South African government’s tobacco ban, the Fair Trade Tobacco Association (FITA) is seeking to appeal the judgement at the Supreme Court of Appeal. The Pretoria High Court will hear the appeal on July 15
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
In the USA, in response to the Stanford e-cigarette study, lawmakers have urged the FDA to consider a temporary ban on e-cigarettes during the pandemic
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): FDA
Country(s): USA
Spain has banned smoking in public spaces where social distancing is not possible. These measure were initially put in place in Galicia and the Canary Islands and then applied nation-wide. Industry representatives ‘Mesa del Tabaco’, have come out against the restrictions, citing lack of evidence of its effectiveness
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Spain
BAT South Africa’s legal challenge was heard on August 5th, 2020. The company argued that the regulation was a restriction on consumer rights and free trade, whereas Dlamini-Zuma argued that they were protecting the healthcare system
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
The ban was lifted on August 17th, 2020 as lockdown entered ‘level 2'
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): South Africa
The FITA are continuing to pursue their Supreme Court appeal despite the ban now being lifted
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
In Bhutan, a ban on tobacco products that was first introduced in 2010 has been lifted “to temper demand for smuggled cigarettes”.
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Bhutan
Japan Tobacco International (JTI) is calling for “stiffer sanctions” against illicit tobacco trade in the Philippines. The company claims tobacco smuggling has increased during COVID-19. This may be a tactic to counter regulation damaging to the tobacco industry
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Illicit Trade
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Philippines
In South Africa, the Fair Trade Independent Tobacco Association (FITA) said it would withdraw its legal case against the government if the government pledged that a tobacco sales ban will not return. Minister DlaminiZuma has said they cannot make this promise. However, the government has declared that any future COVID-19 related tobacco bans will include a public consultation
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): FITA
Country(s): South Africa
Japan Tobacco International (JTI) executives speaking at the Global Tobacco and Nicotine Forum have said illicit tobacco trade in Europe has increased during the pandemic and argued against higher tobacco taxes in Russia, claiming that tax increases encourage smuggling. The data comes from “field reports” conducted by JTI themselves
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): Policy Interference
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Europe and Russia
BAT Bangladesh has been lobbying government agencies to prevent pandemic related regulation during COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Lobbying
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangladesh
Turkey has introduced a ban on smoking in many outdoor public spaces in response to the pandemic. They cite damage to health and crowding together of smokers with no masks as reasons for the ban
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Turkey
North Korea has announced a similar ban on smoking in public “keeping in mind the hygiene of people amid the COVID-19 pandemic.” The country has not officially reported any COVID-19 deaths
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): North Korea
JTI Malaysia has said tax increases on tobacco products should not happen for at least 2 years, arguing that higher tax will increase the illicit trade in cigarettes. JTI used a similar argument in the Philippines, saying that smuggling has increased during COVID-19. JTI representatives were present at the destruction of smuggled cigarettes at a Filipino port alongside local officials. Historically, JTI themselves have been involved in tobacco smuggling operations
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Illicit Trade
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Malaysia and Philippines
On 11 December 2020 the Western Cape High Court in South Africa ruled the tobacco sales ban during the COVID-19 lockdown was unconstitutional and unnecessary, after British American Tobacco South Africa (BATSA) took the Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) to Court in May
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
The South African Government to appeal court ruling that tobacco ban was unconstitutional. The Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) has said the government’s appeal against the tobacco ban ruling may not lead to a further sales ban
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): South Africa
BATSA intend to oppose the government’s application for leave to appeal the recent High Court judgement which found the tobacco ban during COVID lockdown to be unnecessary
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
The Tax Justice South Africa (TJSA) stated that South Africa lost over R5bn in taxes
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): South Africa
The outdoor smoking ban in Mallorca was relaxed in December 2020, but smokers will have to keep 2m social distancing rule. The smoking ban in hotels, restaurants and bars remains in place
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Spain
The Assam Government in India has extended their tobacco ban for another year in response to COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): India
Dartmouth College in the U.S announced a campus-wide ban on use of tobacco and vaping products in both indoor and outdoor spaces. The College President cited “growing evidence” of the link between tobacco use and a variety of life-threatening diseases, such as COVID-19, as one reason the policy was implemented
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Dartmouth College
Country(s): USA
A National Income Dynamics Study in South Africa has shown that the government lost R5.8bn in tobacco excise taxes during the 20-week ban period
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): South Africa
British American Tobacco South Africa (BATSA) has warned the government that the 8% double inflation increase in tobacco excise tax is a “dangerous mistake” given the growing illicit tobacco trade. The South African Tobacco Transformation Alliance (SATTA) also argued that illegal tobacco traders will profit from this increase in excise tax
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Illicit Trade
Organisation(s): BAT and South African Tobacco Transformation Alliance
Country(s): South Africa
The South African High Court has granted Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs government minister, leave to appeal the adverse ruling on the tobacco ban which found it unconstitutional and invalid
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): South Africa
BATSA stated it was “disappointed, but not surprised” the government was granted leave to appeal the court ruling that the tobacco ban was unconstitutional. BATSA said the government should use the money it will spend on the appeal on fighting the COVID pandemic and illicit tobacco trade instead
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Policy Interference, Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
Chhattisgarh state in India has made a legal amendment to the 2004 Kopta Act and banned tobacco consumption for youth under 21 years old
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): India
Two workers at the PMI Sampoerna factory have died of COVID-19. Manufacturing has been suspended and other workers quarantined
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): PMI Sampoerna
Country(s): Indonesia
Tobacco workers unions have called to postpone the tobacco marketing season to avoid putting workers at risk of infection
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): Tobacco Worker Unions
Country(s): Zimbabwe
500 staff from PMI’s Sampoerna factory were placed under quarantine following the deaths of two tobacco workers and the positive testing of a further 63. Health authorities have recalled cigarettes produced in the factory
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): PMI Sampoerna
Country(s): Indonesia
Continued production at the Pakistan Tobacco Company factory has resulted in 89 positive COVID-19 cases
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): BAT subsidiary Pakistan Tobacco Company
Country(s): Pakistan
STOP, ASH US and GGTC have all spoken out on the risk to tobacco workers during the pandemic, as reported in an article that summarises cases of worker COVID-19 exposure in Pakistan and internationally
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): Tobacco Control Advocates
Country(s): Global
51 workers in South Korean tobacco company KT&G’s Indonesian factory tested positive for COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): KT&G
Country(s): Indonesia
In Malawi, tobacco farmers say their earnings have fallen because they are not allowed to attend auctions and negotiate prices due to COVID-19 restrictions. The farmers associations that represent them at auction disagree, saying they operate fairly. Tobacco is a major cash crop in Malawi. The industry has a history of pushing a narrative of support for farmers whilst in reality farmers remain impoverished
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): Tobacco Worker Unions
Country(s): Malawi
The Tobacco Free Association of Zambia investigated farming practices at farms supplying Japan Tobacco International and found dangerous practices, with a lack of COVID-19 precautions and children exposed to dangerous pesticides and green tobacco. This investigation was reported on by STOP, highlighting that JTI has tried to improve its public image during the pandemic via CSR donations. Subsequent outreach to media in Zambia has resulted in stories countering JTI’s CSR narrative
Monitoring Period: 13 June 2020 - 27 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #6
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Zambia
In Andhra Pradesh, India, the State government is buying tobacco straight from farmers to support them as they suffer delays in auctions and reduced prices during COVID-19
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): State Government
Country(s): India
In the Philippines the National Tobacco Administration has called for cigarette manufacturers to increase their buying of local tobacco over foreign growers “to boost the industry and benefit local growers amid the pandemic.” JTI have said they will increase local purchases
Monitoring Period: 22 September 2020 - 26 October 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #10
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): JTI
Country(s): Philippines
Vietnam Tobacco Corporation released PR campaign promoting the work they have done throughout 2020 to prevent the spread of COVID and ensure production and stability of jobs for their employees
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): Vietnam Tobacco Corporation
Country(s): Vietnam
BAT gave a presentation on its preliminary results for 2020 stating they had ensured “COVID-secure workplace measures in all markets” and that “no employees [were] made redundant or furloughed due to COVID crisis”
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Tobacco Workers
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Global
BAT (through its subsidiary Kentucky BioProcessing) are involved in coronavirus vaccine development, using tobacco plants as viral particle ‘factories'
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
PMI (40% share in Medicago) are involved in coronavirus vaccine development, using tobacco plants as viral particle ‘factories'
Monitoring Period: 20 March 2020 - 16 April 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #1
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
BAT’s Kentucky BioProcessing moves to animal testing of vaccine
Monitoring Period: 17 April 2020 - 1 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #2
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
BAT’s Kentucky BioProcessing say it is ready for human trials of its COVID-19 vaccine
Monitoring Period: 1 May 2020 - 15 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #3
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
BAT General Manager, Felicio Ferraz, says Kentucky BioProcessing have submitted a Pre-Investigative New Drug package to the US FDA and highlights BAT’s CSR donations in the UK, Brazil, Kenya, Bangladesh and USA
Monitoring Period: 15 May 2020 - 29 May 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #4
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
Biotech company Medicago, who are 40% PMI owned, announced positive results from animal trials of their COVID-19 vaccine
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
BAT’s Kentucky BioProcessing is looking to governments for support in terms of drug approval and manufacture for their vaccine development programme
Monitoring Period: 30 May 2020 - 12 June 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #5
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
Pharmaceutical company GSK has partnered with 40% PMI owned Medicago to assist in producing Medicago’s plant synthesised COVID-19 vaccine. GSK is aiming to make the vaccine available in the first half of 2021. PMI is now “evaluat[ing] offers for its shareholding from parties that may be better suited to help Medicago on the next phase of its journey” according to a statement on the Medicago website
Monitoring Period: 28 June 2020 - 10 July 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #7
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
BAT announced they applied for FDA approval for their Kentucky BioProcessing COVID-19 vaccine in July, and human trials may begin within weeks
Monitoring Period: 11 July 2020 - 20 August 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #8
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
A Thai COVID-19 vaccine synthesised using tobacco plants has proved successful in animal trials. This programme is not related to the tobacco industry, but the research may be of interest to tobacco companies
Monitoring Period: 21 August 2020 - 21 September 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #9
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): University Research
Country(s): Thailand
The Canadian government announced a CAD$173 million investment to secure 76 million doses of Medicago’s COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccine has been shown to induce an immune response in early human trials
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): Government
Country(s): Canada
PMI (one third owner of Medicago) used the announcement for promotional purposes via their website, where PMI CEO André Calantzopoulos said: “We welcome the collaboration announced between two departments of the Canadian government and Medicago to accelerate its efforts against COVID-19.”
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
PMI’s involvement in the vaccine was reported widely, including in Romania, Nigeria, Malaysia, Switzerland and Indonesia
Monitoring Period: 27 October 2020 - 24 November 2020
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #11
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
PMI’s CEO Calantzopoulos was part of an AmericanHellenic Chamber of Commerce roundtable discussion on the COVID-19 vaccine alongside the Greek Prime Minister, Pfizer CEO and Deloitte CEO
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Greece and USA
PMI and the Government of Canada are collaborating on vaccine development. The Canadian government has stated it is investing US$130million in the Medicago vaccine (PMI owns one third of Medicago)
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
BAT’s COVID vaccine candidate has got U.S. approval for human trials. The COVID-19 vaccine is being developed by the company’s biotech arm Kentucky BioProcessing
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): USA
State Officials from the U.S. state of New Jersey say smokers should be a priority to receive the COVID vaccine
Monitoring Period: 25 November 2020 - 25 January 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #12
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): State Officials
Country(s): USA
French pro-tobacco website lemondedutabac.com published an article stating the Spanish Ministry of Health has concluded an agreement with Logista for the distribution of the COVID vaccine to Spain's autonomous communities. Logista is a “fully consolidated subsidiary” of Imperial Brands, according to the group's most recent annual report, that delivers tobacco and non-tobacco products
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): Imperial Brands subsidiary Logista
Country(s): Spain
The chairman of the National Authority on Tobacco and Alcohol (NATA) in Sri Lanka has said giving a COVID vaccine to individuals who are addicted to tobacco is “not effective” as smoking impairs their immunity
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2021 - 25 March 2021
Reference: STOP COVID19 Monitoring Brief #13
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): National Authority on Tobacco and Alcohol
Country(s): Sri Lanka
Part-PMI owned Medicago launch phase 3 human trials for COVID-19 vaccine in Scotland.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: Grampian Online
Tactic(s): CSR, Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): UK
BAT subsidiary Kentucky Bioprocessing partner with South Africa government for COVID-19 vaccine manufacture.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: News 24
Tactic(s): CSR, Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
Nature review paper dicussing increased risk COVID-19 in smokers.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: Nature
Tactic(s): Academic Research
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): International
Medicago COVID-19 vaccine "under evaluation for approval in Canada".
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: Genetic Literacy Project
Tactic(s): CSR, Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
"Scientific paper that claimed smokers less likely to contract Covid retracted over tobacco industry links".
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: The Independent
Tactic(s): Academic Research
Organisation(s): FSFW
Country(s): International
"Tobacco ban at the beginning of lockdown saw [South African Revenue Service] lose R14 billion in revenue."
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: The Citizen
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): South Africa
Philip Morris PPE donations in the Philippines.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: VERA Files
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMFTC
Country(s): Philippines
Impacts of COVID-19 on US convenience store cigarette sales.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: CSP Daily News
Tactic(s): Tobacco Business
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): USA
"A Ban On Designated Smoking Areas To Combat The Spread Of COVID".
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: NewsGram
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): India
Lebanon Health minister met with Regie tobacco Director to discuss COVID-19 vaccination.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2021 - 25 May 2021
Reference: Regie Libanaise de Tabacs et Tombacs
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): Regie Tobacco
Country(s): Lebanon
"Does Nicotine Prevent COVID Transmission? France Might Begin Clinical Trials".
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: Science 2.0
Tactic(s): Academic Research
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): France
As with COVID, EU must help WHO stand up to Chinese tobacco.
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: Euronews
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): WHO, China National Tobacco
Country(s): EU, China
Medicago vaccine trials in Quebec sponsored by Canada government.
Monitoring Period: 26 July 2021 - 25 September 2021
Reference: Vaughan Today
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
"Did South Africa’s Covid-19 tobacco ban work?".
Monitoring Period: 26 July 2021 - 25 September 2021
Reference: News 24
Tactic(s): Regulation
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): South Africa
BAT sets up COVID-19 vaccination booths in Bangladesh, in partnerhsip with Government.
Monitoring Period: 26 July 2021 - 25 September 2021
Reference: The Business Standard
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangaldesh
""Nicotine, a protective agent against Covid-19"? The tobacco industry funded researchers".
Monitoring Period: 26 May 2021 - 25 July 2021
Reference: RTBF Belgium
Tactic(s): Academic Research
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): France, International
Medicago human trials taking place in Brazil.
Monitoring Period: 26 May 2021 - 25 July 2021
Reference: NEXO
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Brazil
"Philip Morris International makes £1bn offer for pharma firm Vectura".
Monitoring Period: 26 May 2021 - 25 July 2021
Reference: The Guardian
Tactic(s): Pharmaceuticalisation
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): UK
Smokers show lwoer antibody response to COVID-19 vaccine.
Monitoring Period: 26 May 2021 - 25 July 2021
Reference: New England Journal of Medicine
Tactic(s): Academic Research
Organisation(s): N/A
Country(s): Iceland
Philip Morris Korea installs outdoor smoking booths for HTP's to allow for "better circulation" in response to COVID-19.
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: Korea Times
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): South Korea
PMI sponsored Medicago COVID-19 vaccine trials in Wales.
Monitoring Period: 26 November 2021 - 25 January 2022
Reference: Deeside.com
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Wales
"Tobacco industry 'preyed on' governments during COVID-19 — reports" .
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: devex
Tactic(s): Policy Interference
Organisation(s): PMI, BAT
Country(s): International
BAT sponsored video detailing BAT Bangladesh CSR during COVID-19.
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: YouTube
Tactic(s): CSR
Organisation(s): BAT
Country(s): Bangladesh
PMI sponsored Medicago vaccine to be launched in Japan.
Monitoring Period: 26 September 2021 - 25 November 2021
Reference: NikkeiAsia
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Japan
Health Canada approve Medicago's PMI funded COVIFENZ COVID-19 vaccine.
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2022 - 25 March 2022
Reference: GSK Press Release
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): Canada
"WHO rejects Medicago COVID-19 vaccine over Canadian company’s ties to tobacco industry" Medicago discusses PMI disinvesting.
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2022 - 25 March 2022
Reference: The Globe and Mail
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI
Country(s): International
In February 2022, Health Canada approved Medicago’s Covifenz for distribution. At this point PMI held a 25% stake in the company.(Philip Morris International, 2021 Q3 earnings report).
Monitoring Period: 26 January 2022 - 25 March 2022
Reference: Reuters
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI, Medicago
Country(s): Canada
WHO rejected Medicago’s request for emergency global use of its Covifenz vaccine in March 2022, due to Medicago’s ties to PMI.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2022 - 25 February 2023
Reference: CBC Canada
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI, Medicago
Country(s): Canada
Medicago’s majority shareholder, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation, removed PMI as a shareholder in December 2022, following an advocacy campaign led by Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) Canada and Corporate Accountability.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2022 - 25 February 2023
Reference: CISION PR Newswire
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI, Medicago
Country(s): Canada
In February 2023, Mitsubishi shut down Medicago, citing a lack of commercial viability for its Covifenz vaccine.
Monitoring Period: 26 March 2022 - 25 February 2023
Reference: CBC Canada
Tactic(s): Vaccine Development
Organisation(s): PMI, Medicago
Country(s): Canada
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 1, 23 April 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 2, 06 May 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 3, 20 May 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 4, 04 June 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 5, 18 June 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 6, 01 July 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 7, 16 July 2020
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 8, August 2020 – Focus on South Africa’s tobacco ban
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 9, September 2020 – Focus on Corporate Social Responsibility
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 11, November 2020
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STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 12, January 2021
عربى Español Français
STOP COVID-19 Monitoring brief: Edition 13, March 2021
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From the Global Center for Good Governance in Tobacco Control