Some in Brazil Distrust UN’s Tobacco Control Pact

Brazil is the world’s largest tobacco exporter and the second-biggest producer, responsible for an annual output of 850 thousand tons (worth US$ 1.5 billion), outranked only by China’s 2 million tons.

India, in third place, with 700 thousand tons, was the only one of the major producers to sign the “Tobacco Control Framework Convention,” proposed by the United Nations to establish strict anti-smoking rules.


September 15, Brazil’s Senate Commission on Foreign Relations and National Defense held a public hearing to discuss this matter.

The president of the Tobacco Industry Syndicate (Sindi-Fumo), Cláudio Henn, said that he is afraid that Brazil will sign the agreement under international pressure.


“Brazil is suffering international pressure from rival countries that are out to grab the share we export,” Henn believes. From his perspective, the country should act cautiously.

World cigarette consumption amounts to three trillion cigarettes annually and is growing at a rate of nearly 1%. For Henn, the industry also has a responsibility in matters of health, and the treaty contains various positive items.


“Not selling to minors, not smoking in enclosed spaces, doing away with subsidies, and combatting the black market, all of this is positive,” he comments.

Nearly 1/3 of the cigarettes sold in Brazil nowadays are contraband, and this entails US$ 484 million (R$ 1.4 billion) in lost taxes and the elimination of 16 thousand jobs.


Taxes on tobacco yield US$ 2.1 billion (R$ 6.2 billion) in revenue to the Brazilian government each year. Almost all of Brazilian production is concentrated in the South, in the states of Rio Grande do Sul, Paraná, and Santa Catarina.

During the public hearing to discuss the ratification of the international convention to control tobacco throughout the world, the Brazilian Minister of Health, Humberto Costa, asserted that the agreement is intended neither to harm Brazilian tobacco farmers nor to make tobacco an illegal product.

In order for the convention to go into effect, at least 40 of the 192 countries that signed the framework convention need to ratify it. Around 30 nations have already done so.

The “Tobacco Control Framework Convention” has already been approved by the Chamber of Deputies and has been in the Senate for four months.


If it is approved, it will only require the President’s signature to be placed in practice. The reporter of the Commission, Senator Fernando Bezerra,  has shown himself to be in favor of approval.

Agência Brasil
Reporter: Alessandra Bastos
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Would Like a More Balanced Trade with Algeria

The Brazilian government is interested in negotiating a trade agreement with Algeria. The subject ...

Rapidinhas

TV Naked assets Galisteu couldn’t resist taking her clothes off The contract’s clause was ...

US AIDS Foundation Applauds Brazil for Defeating Abbott on AIDS Drug

US-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the American largest HIV/AIDS healthcare, prevention and education provider, ...

Brazil Listens to Experts to Eliminate Red Tape in Foreign Trade

On Friday, July 7, Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando ...

Brazil-Iran Trade Balance Heavy in Brazil’s Favor: US$ 1.2 Billion Vs US$ 19 million

Brazil’s minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Miguel Jorge, is going to send ...

Artists and Cannibals

Organizers of São Paulo’s 24th Bienal are expecting that 450,000 will be drawn by ...

Brazilian Congress Urges Speedy Creation of Palestinian State

Brazil's National Congress held a solemn session on Thursday, December 4, to observe the ...

Apex to Promote Exports of Brazilian Machinery

The Brazilian Export Promotion Agency (Apex) and the Brazilian Machinery Manufacturers Association (Abimaq) signed ...

Accused of Spying on Brazil’s Government, Kroll Denies Wrongdoing

The transnational investigative firm, Kroll, is being investigated by the Brazilian federal police in ...

Brazil 2010 Amazon Deforestation Data Shows Lowest Rate Ever Recorded

The Brazilian government is announcing that deforestation rates in the Brazilian Amazon declined 14% ...