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TAAT Global Alternatives Inc C.TAAT

Alternate Symbol(s):  TOBAF

TAAT Global Alternatives Inc. is a vertically integrated consumer product and distribution company. The Company develops, manufactures, and distributes alternative product categories, such as tobacco and reduced-risk alternatives, hemp, kratom, and other emerging consumer packaged goods (CPG) segments. The Company operates through two segments: the sale of non-tobacco and tobacco products. The Company is developing nicotine-free and tobacco-free alternatives to traditional cigarettes. The Company utilizes a proprietary, patent-pending process (including a patent-pending refinement technique) with a blend of all-natural ingredients to provide smokers aged above 21 with an alternative to traditional cigarettes that do not contain nicotine or tobacco. The Company has facilities to include a processing plant in Nevada as well as a distribution center in Canton, Ohio, leveraging existing retail shelf space and pipelines into national wholesale channels.


CSE:TAAT - Post by User

Post by synectixon Mar 11, 2022 6:50pm
223 Views
Post# 34508228

Tobacco ads in sports... $136 million in 1992 to $0 in 2013

Tobacco ads in sports... $136 million in 1992 to $0 in 2013In 2010, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), under authority of the 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (FSPTCA), prohibited tobacco-brand sponsorship (i.e., sponsorship of sports and entertainment events or other social or cultural events using the tobacco brand name or anything identifiable with any brand of cigarettes or smokeless tobacco).§ However, corporate-name tobacco sponsorship (i.e., sponsorship using the name of the corporation that manufactures regulated tobacco products) is still permitted under certain conditions. To monitor tobacco advertising and promotional activities in sports in the United States, CDC analyzed trends in sports-related marketing expenditures for cigarettes and smokeless tobacco during 1992–2013 using data from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). During 1992–2013, sports-related marketing expenditures, adjusted by the consumer price index to constant 2013 dollars, decreased significantly for both cigarettes (from $136 million in 1992 to $0 in 2013) and smokeless tobacco (from $34.8 million in 1992 to $2.1 million in 2013). During 2010–2013, after the prohibition of tobacco-brand sponsorship in sports under the FSPTCA, cigarette manufacturers reported no spending (i.e., $0) on sports-related advertising and promotional activities; in contrast, smokeless tobacco manufacturers reported expenditures of $16.3 million on advertising and promoting smokeless tobacco in sports during 2010–2013. These findings indicate that despite prohibitions on brand sponsorship, smokeless tobacco products continue to be marketed in sports in the United States, potentially through other indirect channels such as corporate-name sponsorship. Enhanced measures are warranted to restrict youth-oriented tobacco marketing and promotional activities that could lead to tobacco initiation and use among children and adolescents.[2] Reducing tobacco industry promotion through sponsorship of public and private events is an evidence-based strategy for preventing youth initiation of tobacco use.[3] In addition, other proven interventions (e.g., tobacco price increases, anti-tobacco mass media campaigns, tobacco-free policies inclusive of smokeless tobacco, and barrier-free access to cessation services), could help reduce smokeless tobacco use in the United States.[1]
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