In a few days, as many as 181 countries will converge in Geneva, Switzerland for the Eighth Conference of the Parties (COP8) of the global tobacco treaty to shut off one of the last avenues of influence the tobacco industry has to interfere with public health policy-making at the talks. At the conference holding 1-7 October, countries will advance a provision that will prohibit the tobacco industry from exploiting public badges, which are primarily used by tobacco industry representatives to delay, block and weaken the treaty.
In the past year, in advance of COP8, Big Tobacco has escalated its attempts to re-normalize the deadly industry: doubling down on promoting heat-not-burn products and launching a billion dollar foundation in hopes of regaining lost footing in policymaking spaces. This year, governments will also advance policies to eliminate illicit trade.
The policy to kick Big Tobacco out stems from a broader treaty directive called Article 5.3 that prevents industry interference in the halls of government. Internal industry documents show that when the tobacco industry successfully gains access to the talks by attending on public badges, they obtain confidential information, lobby government delegates, and attempt to water down public health policy.
âThe number one barrier to fully implementing this life-saving treaty is industry interference,â said Michel Legendre, associate campaign director with Corporate Accountability. âWith Big Tobacco on the defensive, and governments poised to give it the boot, the outcomes of this yearâs Conference of the Parties will mark a turning point for public health.â
The policy decision to truly eliminate the industry from the halls of negotiation will have resounding implications for policymaking spaces in other arenas, like the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, where industry interference inside of the negotiating spaces has been a significant barrier to real success.
âThe Public Badges policy is a revolving door that Big Tobacco continues to exploit. The talks presents a crucial opportunity for Parties to bound together to finally shut that door to stop Big Tobacco meddlingâ, said Philip Jakpor, Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT) Nigeria Spokesperson.
The global tobacco treaty, known formally as the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), entered into force in 2005. To date, 181 countries and the European Union have become Parties to the treaty. It contains the worldâs most effective tobacco control and corporate accountability measuresâestimated to save more than 200 million lives by 2050 when fully implemented.
Other key developments/issues of focus at the Eighth Conference of the Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control:
⢠The Philip Morris International-funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World has launched and is expected to lobby heavily in support of the industry at this yearâs negotiations.
⢠For the first time, governments have seen hundreds of newly public internal documents that detail Big Tobaccoâs extensive lobbying and manipulation schemes to undermine the talks.
⢠E-cigs regulation
- Strengthening of FCTC Article 19 with focus on facilitating access to justice for victims of smoking-related disease; Healthcare cost recovery; and Enforcing existing tobacco control measures or general laws relevant to tobacco, including injunctive relief.