JTI is hindering—not helping—the SDGs
In addition to threatening public health in Georgia, JTI’s new deal erodes its supposed commitment to the SDGs. In its 2021 Integrated Report, the tobacco giant identified nine SDGs to which its business contributes. In reality, much of JTI’s business, including this apparent expansion of cigarette manufacturing capabilities in the region, actively works against at least five of the SDGs JTI claims its business can support.
The first and most obvious is Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being. Cigarette production only drives the tobacco epidemic, which claims 8 million lives every single year. Using tobacco is linked to various cancers, heart disease, chronic respiratory conditions and more. People who don’t use tobacco but who are exposed to secondhand smoke also suffer serious health consequences, including coronary heart disease, lung cancer and increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome in babies. In addition, tobacco use and related medical spending causes financial strain on individuals and governments, as well as emotional strain, harming well-being from almost every angle.
Another is Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities. Tobacco use is anti-equity, and the problems start at the first step in the supply chain. Some smallholder farmers growing the tobacco used in Big Tobacco’s cigarettes become trapped in a cycle of poverty. Tobacco companies also target people who, due to racism and other forms of discrimination, already face barriers to getting what they need to thrive, such as access to health care. When tobacco companies hook and encourage continued tobacco use among people who already face inequity, they are harming the health of those who may already have difficulty getting medical care. Spending on medical care and even the inability to work due to tobacco-related illness further widens these disparities.
And finally, increasing its market presence in the region is an affront to Goals 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production), 13 (Climate Action) and 15 (Life on Land). Tobacco growing, manufacturing and use all cause environmental devastation. According to a 2015 WHO bulletin, one year of manufacturing alone produced more than 2,000,000 tonnes of solid waste; 300,000 tonnes of non-recyclable nicotine-containing waste and 200,000 tonnes of chemical waste. The environmental harm doesn’t end once cigarettes have been smoked. Cigarette butts are the most littered item on earth. The plastic filters found in almost all commercial cigarettes are contributing to the growing plastic pollution crisis.