Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle Portrait Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (GP)
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My Lords, coming so far down the list in your Lordships’ debate—the number of speakers demonstrating the strength of feeling on the issue on all sides of the House, mostly slanted in the direction of seeking to do more to take on big tobacco—I am seeking not to repeat what has already been said, but rather, to highlight a couple of issues that I expect to pick up in Committee.

However, first, I will answer the question of the noble Lord, Lord Vaizey of Didcot, not currently in his place, about what the Bill is for—or rather, what the Green Party thinks it should be for. The Bill should aim to sound the death knell of big tobacco: the merchants of death who have preyed on vulnerable people, particularly children, hooking them for life. Their products have shortened lives, as the noble Lord, Lord Stevens of Birmingham, pointed out, at great financial and personal cost to those individuals, while providing spectacular profits for those companies. As regulation has sought to restrict their indefensible trade, they have twisted and turned, lobbied and wrestled, dodged and shapeshifted into new and harmful forms.

One of those forms is nicotine pouches, as the noble Earl, Lord Howe, highlighted. This issue was brought home to me on 9 September 2024; I know that because I documented what I saw on social media. At Manchester Piccadilly station, a giant yellow booth almost blocked the entrance. It was surrounded by a group of smiling young people, welcoming and warm, seeking to hand out such pouches to random passers-by. The company’s name is Velo, and a little research uncovered that it is owned by British American Tobacco. Well, shame on you, British American Tobacco, for peddling to young people, at random, a dangerous and addictive poison. You are besmirching the good name of our country by your actions.

Of course, those actions are taking place around the world. Our focus today has been on the UK, but I ask the Minister—I will understand if she chooses to write to me later—what steps the Government are taking to stop British-based and British-linked companies continuing their immoral peddling around the world. The UK was known back in the age of the opium wars as a narco-state; we surely do not want to be one today. I am going to see whether it is possible to address this issue in Committee.

The World Health Organization estimates that there are 1.25 billion adult tobacco users around the world. So, about one in five adults worldwide consume tobacco, which is an improvement on the figure for 2000, when one in three did so. But that is not on track to meet the global goal of a 30% reduction from the 2010 baseline. Why? Let us take a clue from the slogan for this year’s World No Tobacco Day, which is 31 May. The slogan is:

“Protecting children from tobacco industry interference”.


My final point picks up an issue raised powerfully by the noble Baroness, Lady Northover, about the deceptive, deceitful behaviour of the industry and its regular indulging in healthwashing, greenwashing and astroturfing—all the techniques of well-funded dodgy public relations. On the subject I am about to raise, the industry even took a shot at me. The email to me came from comment@parliamentnews.co.uk via parliament.uk, and was signed “Mariana”—first name only, no company name, no other identification. It asked me to back an amendment to bring in a ban on plastic filters on cigarettes.

In my reference to this, I am drawing on the great work of Action on Smoking and Health to highlight the fact that cigarette filters offer no health benefits. They were introduced by the tobacco industry not to protect health but to create the illusion of a safer cigarette. They have rightly been called the deadliest fraud in human history. These filters are made from single-use plastics and are an environmental disaster. In the UK they account for two-thirds of all littered items and cost councils £40 million a year to clean up. But so-called biodegradable filters are still toxic, break down only under certain conditions and provide a false sense that there is some kind of eco-responsibility so you do not have to worry about the problem. They give tobacco companies the chance to continue their greenwashing and healthwashing. The real solution is simple: ban all cigarette filters. I hope the Government will consider bringing in such a ban.