The Korea Herald

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KT&G to release heat-not-burn tobacco amid iQOS growing popularity

By a2016032

Published : June 8, 2017 - 16:02

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KT&G Corp. said Thursday it will soon release heat-not-burn cigarettes amid the growing popularity of the smoke-free tobacco despite concerns of the emissions of toxic substances similar to those of conventional cigarettes.

The largest tobacco manufacturer in South Korea will begin marketing the new product in September, a KT&G official said, noting Phillip Morris Korea began selling iQOS on May 27.  

(Yonhap) (Yonhap)

"We are witnessing the growing popularity of iQOS, although it's not been so long since its launch in South Korea," a Phillip Morris Korea official said, refusing to elaborate on the sales.

A 51-year-old man, who identified himself only as Lee, said he bought iQOS, saying, "I want to stop smoking on a gradual basis with the help of iQOS which is said to have less toxic substances."

Phillip Morris Korea said iQOS releases only about 10 percent of the toxic substances emitted by conventional cigarettes.

"IQOS heats the tobacco just enough to release a flavorful nicotine-containing vapor without burning it," it said. "The tobacco in a cigarette burns at temperatures in excess of 600 C, generating smoke that contains harmful chemicals. But iQOS heats tobacco to much lower temperatures, below 350 C, without combustion, fire, ash, or smoke. The lower temperature heating releases the true taste of heated tobacco."

British American Tobacco (BAT Korea) said it will follow suit with the sale of Neostiks for BAT's tobacco heating product, glo, in August.

"Initial production of Neostiks in the Sacheon Factory is planned for export to Japan and for preparations for launching glo in Korea," BAT Korea said on its web site.

"Neostiks, specially designed tobacco sticks for glo, are heated by the device to create a vapor with an experience similar to that of a cigarette but with reduced potential for risk."

Critics, however, denounce HNB tobacco cigarette producers for promoting smoking of the new product though the safety has not yet been truly verified.

Professor Reto Auer of the University of Bern said his team found no big differences between the amount of hazardous materials contained in the smoke of conventional cigarettes and the iQOS vapor.

"There can be smoke without fire," Auer said in a report carried on the May 22, 2017, edition of JAMA Internal Medicine.

"The harmful components of tobacco cigarette smoke are products of incomplete combustion (pyrolysis) and the degradation of tobacco cigarettes through heat (thermogenic degradation). Complete combustion occurs at a high temperature of over 1300 C, higher than the heat generated by smoking a tobacco cigarette that is significantly lower at 800 C. Typical markers of pyrolysis and thermogenic degradation of tobacco cigarettes are acetaldehyde, an irritant carcinogenic volatile organic compound, benzo[a]pyrene, a carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, and carbon monoxide." (Yonhap)