PRESS RELEASE
BRUSSELS, 02 APRIL 2026
EU tobacco law evaluation jeopardises 2040 smoke-free goal by sidelining crucial evidence
The European Union risks missing its 2040 smoke-free goal if it lets political decisions inform evidence, British American Tobacco (BAT) said today in response to the publication of theEuropean Commission’s evaluation report on the current EU tobacco and nicotine legislation.
The Commission's report, published today, reveals that the draft report received a negativeopinion from the Commission’s own Regulatory Scrutiny Board late last year. The reportacknowledges that it couldn't make a clear distinction between the contributions of specificpolicy measures, and admits to making no effort to assess the impact of ‘external factors’, likeconsumer preferences or the availability of smokeless alternatives, on smoking rates.
According to the Commission’s own Better Regulation guidelines, these evaluations shouldfollow a rigorous evidence-based process in which “evidence informs political decisions – notthe other way around.” Yet after four years of work, the process appears to have strayed far fromthat standard, departing from the transparent, inclusive and evidence-led approach theCommission repeatedly promised.
BAT’s six key concerns with the Evaluation Report
- A biased evaluation process. Stakeholder consultation has prioritised opinion overevidence and ignored the interests of adult nicotine consumers, rural communities, SMEs,business organisations and even members of the European Parliament. Meanwhile, aBloomberg-funded NGO syndicate ideologically opposed to nicotine use was awarded a€3M contract by DG SANTE to support the review. The Commission claims that theevaluation report is backed by a ‘broad and diverse’ set of evidence, even though the NGOstudy is not publicly available or open to scrutiny.
- Bans don’t work. Across the EU, bans and heavy restrictions on smokeless products don’teliminate demand. Instead, they push consumers to illegal markets with no age checks,safety standards or tax revenues. In the Netherlands, underage vaping rose 15% between2023 and 2025 after a flavoured vapour ban1. The Frauenhofer Institute estimates thataround 50% of the EU vapour market is now illegal or non-compliant2.
- The Commission is not serious about science. DG SANTE relies on incomplete evidence,fails to assess smokeless products properly against cigarettes, and repeats claims widelyrejected by scientists. The report calls vaping a gateway to smoking, despite strongevidence that record numbers of adult smokers have switched to vapour products.
- Selective evidence and predetermined conclusions: The report referencesEurobarometer data on adult smokers switching to smokeless products, yet fails toinclude these products among the listed reasons of a change in behaviour. This internalinconsistency points to a selective use of evidence, with data being highlighted or omittedin a way that supports a predetermined narrative.
- The Commission’s own watchdog has rejected the evaluation. The EuropeanCommission’s oversight body, the Regulatory Scrutiny Board, issued a negative opinionon the evaluation – a signal that it does not meet basic Better Regulation standards.Despite attempts to address the shortcomings identified by the Board, key factorsimpacting smoking rates, such as consumer preferences and the availability of alternativenicotine products, remain unaddressed. As a result, the evaluation cannot crediblyunderpin far-reaching new regulation without substantial correction.
- A big question remains unanswered: Are the problems caused by countries not applyingthe rules correctly, or by not enforcing them? That missing clarity makes the whole pictureblurry. The report should spell out whether the real issues come from how countriesapplied the EU rules or how they enforced them. Without this, it’s impossible to pinpointwhy the framework isn’t delivering as intended.Eurobarometer data shows that countries pairing smart regulation of smokeless products withstrict cigarette rules – such as Sweden, Czechia and Greece – have cut smoking far faster than therest of the EU. Across the block, smoking still stands at 24%, down only two percentage pointssince the 2014 introduction of the current TPD3.
Fabio de Petris, Vice President EU External Affairs at BAT said:
“A smoke-free EU by 2040 will require smart regulation of smokeless nicotine products. Had theCommission followed the science, it would have acknowledged the extensive evidence thatthese products have a reduced risk profile compared with cigarettes, with millions of adultsmokers switching to them.
“Rather than reducing demand, many regulations have proven unenforceable and are pushingconsumers into illegal markets run by criminals, with no age checks, safety standards or taxrevenues, and the Commission has failed to properly evaluate this.
“The report raises serious doubts about whether the Commission is following the evidence or issimply justifying a pre-determined agenda that will set back progress toward a smoke-free EU.”
BAT remains committed to A Better Tomorrow™ and the vision of a smokeless world. Thecompany believes smart regulation of vapour, nicotine pouch and heated tobacco products canadvance public health while maintaining government oversight of a market generating over€107 billion in annual tax revenue4 and supporting nearly 1.45 million jobs5.
Enquiries
BAT EU Press
nathan_jones@bat.com
+77209 940824
Notes to the editor
- The Evaluation Report is available .
- The Evaluation Report on EU tobacco and nicotine legislation assesses how existing EU tobacco rules (including the Tobacco Products Directive and Tobacco AdvertisingDirective) have performed since their introduction; it is intended to inform potentialupcoming revisions to the EU’s tobacco control framework.
- All documents related to the process of the Evaluation report, including press releases,reports, opinions, public consultation feedback, are available .
- A Better Tomorrow™ vision is available here.
- According to the Swedish Public Health Agency, daily smoking among adults aged 16–84is around 5.4 %, one of the lowest rates in Europe. More information available .
- According to the EU’s Eurobarometer data, smoking among adults has decreased inGreece and the Czech Republic by 14% and 23% between 2020-2023, respectively. Moreinformation available .
Footnotes
- StatLine Netherlands – (Accessed March 2026).
- Frauenhofer Institute – (February 2026)
- European Commission – , (June 2024)
- European Commission – , (July 2025)
- Standard & Poor’s Market Intelligence – , (May 2023)