U.S. FDA pushes ahead with move to ban menthol cigarettes
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[April 29, 2022]
By Ankur Banerjee
(Reuters) -The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration on Thursday issued a long-awaited proposal to ban menthol
cigarettes and flavored cigars, a major victory for anti-smoking
advocates but one that could face stiff opposition from Big Tobacco.
The Biden administration's historic proposal, which comes a year after
the agency announced the plan, still needs to be finalized and can take
years to implement.
For decades, menthol cigarettes have been in the crosshairs of
anti-smoking groups who have argued that they contribute to
disproportionate health burdens on Black communities and play a role in
luring young people into smoking.
Menthol cigarettes, banned in many states including California and
Massachusetts, account for more than a third of the industry's overall
market share in the United States, even as overall smoking rates have
been declining in the country.
"Today is a huge win for equity, justice, and public health concerns,"
Derrick Johnson, president of NAACP, the largest U.S. civil rights
organization, said in a statement.
There were more than 18.5 million menthol cigarette smokers ages 12 and
older in the country in 2019, with particularly high rates of use by
youth, young adults, and African American and other racial and ethnic
groups, the agency said.
The U.S. agency said modeling studies have estimated a 15% reduction in
smoking within 40 years if menthol cigarettes were banned.
The public can submit their comments through July 5 from May 5, and the
agency will decide whether to issue a final ruling after reviewing them.
REDUCTION, NOT PROHIBITION
Shares of Altria Group Inc, British America Tobacco Plc, and Imperial
Brands Plc were mixed in afternoon trading.
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Newport and Camel cigarettes are stacked on a shelf inside a tobacco
store in New York July 11, 2014. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
"We believe harm reduction, not prohibition, is the better path
forward," Altria said, adding that pulling these products out of the
legal marketplace will push them into unregulated and criminal
markets.
The American Civil Liberties Union and some other groups have also
opposed the move, raising concerns that a ban will
disproportionately impact Black
https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/
aclu-statement-fda-menthol-cigarette-ban and Brown communities.
While Jefferies foresees a ban happening, the brokerage does not
expect it to take place until 2026 at the earliest. It added BAT can
weather the impact even though over 30% of its overall group profit
comes from U.S. menthol.
BAT said
https://www.bat.com/
group/sites/UK__9D9KCY.nsf/
vwPagesWebLive/DOCDWM9W that evidence from other markets, including
Canada and the EU where similar bans have been imposed, demonstrate
little impact on overall cigarette consumption.
Thursday's announcement has no near-term bearing on the ability to
manufacture, market, sell or consume flavored cigars or menthol
cigarettes, Imperial said. "We believe that any final
implementation, if it comes, is several years away."
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee, Manas Mishra and Praveen Paramasivam
in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Sriraj Kalluvila)
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