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Cigarettes

  • A c-store's guide to selling cannabis accessories

    The legalization of cannabis for non-medical purposes is opening up all sorts of opportunities for c-store operators that go beyond helping customers satisfy the munchies.
  • McCowan: Secure tobacco merchandising is our business

    Secure tobacco merchandising is an important factor in the Gas Convenience business!
  • Shift in nicotine use is putting pressure on cigarette segment

    Shifts in consumers' tobacco use is causing a stir on the back counter, according to a recent survey by Wells Fargo Securities LLC.
  • 3 tips for protecting your tobacco sales

    As the convenience channel moves away from its traditional cokes-and-smokes reputation and toward fresh and healthier offerings, it is easy to overlook the cigarettes category — with its diminishing volumes and tight margins. But, that would be a mistake, according to the experts.
  • Imperial Tobacco denounces plain packaging

    In the wake of the Health Canada's new legislation, Imperial Tobacco is coming out swinging, calling plain packaging a “nanny state” approach that does little to change consumer behaviour.“We remain shocked that despite all of the evidence, the Government of Canada is moving ahead with bad public policy,” said Eric Gagnon, head of corporate and regulatory affairs at Imperial Tobacco Canada.  “The experience of other countries demonstrates that plain packaging does not change consumer behaviour and that it’s a proven way to fuel an already booming illegal tobacco market in Canada.”Imperial Tobacco points out 20 percent of the market remains controlled by illegal operators and criminal organizations selling products outside of any regulatory framework and untaxed (depriving Canadian governments of more than $2 billion in tax revenue every year).“The illegal tobacco problem in Canada is poised to get much worse now that it will be impossible to differentiate between a legal and illegal product.  Not only has the federal government had its head in the sand for long enough when it comes to illegal tobacco, they have facilitated the thriving illegal market by allowing illegal operators unfettered access to the Canadian market,” says Gagnon. “The RCMP have stated that there are 50 illegal factories operating in Canada and 175 criminal gangs involved in the illegal trafficking of tobacco, and the feds have done nothing about it.  They now need to step up and address the issue they created themselves.”Still, plain packing continues to gain traction around the globe.
  • Industry reacts to Health Canada plain packaging rules for tobacco

    Canadian cigarette packs will have to be plain drab brown with standardized layouts and lettering under new rules that start this fall, Health Canada says.Manufacturers will have to begin complying with labelling rules for packages and dimensions for cigarettes by Nov.
  • Ontario court upholds stay of legal proceedings against 3 tobacco companies

    An Ontario court has upheld an order that suspended legal proceedings against three major tobacco companies, rejecting arguments from lawyers representing Quebec smokers.
  • Contraband tobacco: Major strike by the Sûreté du Québec

    Quebec Provincial Police, along with its partners, executed several search warrants and made several arrests as part of project MYGALE
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