Metaverse: We must protect children from tobacco industry manipulation, ATCA warns

    The African Tobacco Control Alliance (ATCA) has expressed concern over recent revelations about tobacco industry’s activities in virtual environments. In a statement by Mrs. Kouami Kossiwa, Interim Executive Secretary of the African Tobacco Control Alliance (ATCA), she made reference to a recent report highlighted by The Guardian on 22 July 2025 on the use of smoking avatars and branded content in the metaverse signals. She described it as “a dangerous evolution in tobacco marketing, one that directly targets young users in largely unregulated digital spaces.”   According to the statement, “Africa is experiencing a remarkable surge in digital innovation. The continent is embracing mobile connectivity, virtual platforms, and immersive technologies at unprecedented speed. The African Union’s Digital Transformation Strategy (2020–2030) envisions a continent where digital tools empower inclusive growth, education, and entrepreneurship. So clearly, young people constitute an important base of the digital space.   “As African youth become increasingly active in virtual spaces including gaming, social media, and immersive platforms, the tobacco industry is adapting its playbook to lure them into addiction. The recent Guardian report reveals how smoking avatars and branded content are infiltrating the metaverse, glamorizing tobacco use in environments where regulation is weak, and youth engagement is high.”   It observed that the trend is especially dangerous in Africa, where 70% of the population is under 30 and where internet penetration has doubled since 2015, with mobile-first access dominating, and digital literacy is rising. The statement warned that “By targeting the metaverse, the tobacco industry aims to promote and normalize nicotine use among children and adolescents, exploiting regulatory grey areas to subvert existing advertising laws. This is not innovation; it is manipulation, and it must be confronted urgently with swift regulatory actions.”   ATCA said the tobacco industry’s encroachment into the metaverse is not just a marketing shift. It is a calculated move to reshape social norms and recruit a new generation of users through digital seduction. Africa’s youth, empowered yet exposed by rising technological connectivity, are at heightened risk. It is our duty to act decisively.   “We, as tobacco control actors, must rise to this moment of transformation with equal innovation and determination. We must not wait for regulation to catch up, we must lead the regulation process. The metaverse must not become a loophole in global health protection.”   ATCA called on governments, civil society, tech companies and every other implicated stakeholder to immediately implement digital regulations that prohibit tobacco promotion, especially in virtual environments frequented by young people. Engage with platform developers to integrate strict anti-tobacco content guidelines, age verification tools, and moderation mechanisms. It also calls for the strengthen of global surveillance of industry behaviour across digital ecosystems, with coordinated reporting and accountability. Investment in youth education and awareness, empowering families to navigate virtual worlds safely and resist harmful influences as well as reaffirming commitment to the WHO FCTC, expanding its relevance to emerging technologies and cross-border marketing.   It appealed to governments, international bodies, civil society organizations, digital innovators, and youth networks to unite in the defence of public health in all spaces, physical or virtual.    

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