Jump to:

Anne Landman's Collection

Presentation to Philip Morris Board

Date: 15 Oct 1973
Length: 3 pages
1000276219-6221
Jump To Images
snapshot_pm 1000276219-1000276221

Abstract

In this brief 1973 speech, Philip Morris' Vice President of Research and Development Helmut Wakeham describes the intensifying pressure on the company to develop a "safe cigaret." He tells PM's Board that the European tobacco industry "has agreed that smoking is harmful and is hard at work on developing 'less hazardous' products," and adds that "We are working to be in a position to design a cigaret which will meet 'less hazardous' specifications if they are ever imposed on us..."

The statement that Philip Morris would only make their product safer if forced to reveals an alarmingly cavalier corporate attitude towards public health. Even though the company's director of research and development noted that his colleagues overseas had admitted that "smoking is harmful," the company's plan was to alter their products only if requirements to do so were imposed upon them by an outside force, such as government, or by market pressures like competition.

Fields

Notes

This document was used as a trial exhibit in Florida, Missouri, Minnesota and Texas.

Quotes

Our most important defensive weapons are in the category of product development. Here the company and industry are facing two clearly discernable trends, both of them arising from the smoking and health controversy. The first of these is the continuing demand to make cigarets milder and milder, in effect to lover tar and nicotine delivery per cigaret. Milder cigaretss have lower taste impace, and our challenge is to maintain and improve customer acceptance in the face of this trend.

The second trend is the intensifying pressure to develop a "safe" cigaret. The European tobacco industry has agreed that smoking is harmful and is hard at work to develop "less hazardous" products. Development and marketing of such cigarets by European firms will put great pressure on Philip Morris International to do likewise. Once International markets a "less hazardous" cigaret, her American counterpart will be able to do no less. And it is probably only a matter of timing since the tobacco program at the National Cancer Institute is also aimed at the development of cigaret prototypes which they will define as "less hazardous."

The definition of cigaret "safeness" centers around a battery of bio-assay tests, currently with animals but eventually with humans...We are working to be in a position to design a cigaret which will meet "less hazardous" specifications if they are ever imposed on us and at the same time to make a product which is attractive to the smoker. I am pleased to report that we already have a number of such prototypes on our shelves, with more to come in the future...

Company
Philip Morris
Author
Wakeham, Helmut R. R., Ph.D. (PM R&D VP)
Vice President and Director of Research & Development, Philip Morris
Recipient
Philip Morris Board, 1973
Region
United States
Named Organization
National Cancer Institute NCI
Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, National Cancer Institute located in Rockville, MD
RJR, R.J. Reynolds
Litigation
Flag/Trial Exhibit P-0331
Flag/Trial Exhibit P-1377
Morm/Trial Exhibit
Stmn/Produced
Stmn/Trial Exhibit P-18044
Txag/Trial Exhibit P-1377
Txag/Trial Exhibit P-331
Named Person
Goldsmith, Clifford Henry (B&H (1953), PM Chief of Operations ('65) Pres of PM, Inc. (')
1953 Benson & Hedges. 1965 Philip Morris USA Chief of Operations. 1969-73 President of Philip Morris, Inc. 1978 PM Chief Executive. Served on Tobacco Institute Executive Committee, 1979.
Type
Spch, Speech/Presentation
Subject
safer cigarette

Document Images

Text Control

Highlight Text:

OCR Text Alignment:

Image Control

Image Rotation:

Image Size:

Page 1: 1000276219 Log in for more options!
Revised Draft October 15, 1973 ,: ?~,,¢. ( have been glven five minutes to describe a five-year plan for. esearch and Development so I mu~t li~ii ~ys~If t; about one mtnut~'e per ', "rhLs I wLII do by briefly stating an underlying approach to our ' ' itbtltttea"a+n~ then ctttng ~wo~s~+tft~,ar~a~ ~tch t belt+v¢ ~++ ~ of tm~nanc+ to ~+ Io~ rang+ well ~tng of our company. F trstly, w+ wo~l~ It~+ ~ to thtn~ of Research and ~v+1opm+nt as an originator, dev++o~r, and tester"of the technol~tcal wea~ns system that underlies and ~otects company ~ltctes, +'particularly in tbe area of and health. Obviously, without an adequate weapons system, ~ffategy ts s~verely limited. Where the weapons inventory contains- :Ions of scientific and engineering meth~l~ to solve our technical problems, it becomes l~rt of our offensive strategy. Where the arsenal :contains protective shields against economi,c, competitive, and political tt Is p rt of defensive ~'afegy:<"As-M G tth expr , a our r. oldsm esses It, "We must keep all bases covered." .... """+-" ....... ~'- : ; " .... +., .... ~. Onr most Important defensive ~eapons are in the category of pr~tuct "~;~""~" +" + " re facing clearly dtscer~able .,develo~ent. Here the company and Industry a two , ............ , ~th of them arising from the smoking and health controversy. The ;~fir~t ~ ~he~e l~ the continuing demand to make cigarets milder and m~lder, : ' '~ect to lower the tar and nicotine delivery ~r ctgaret. Milder ctgarets have ....... lower taste lm~ct, and our challe~e ts to maintain a~d ~prov~ customer:"~ ..........- The secoN trend Is the tntenstfgng ~essure to deve}p a s~e cl~aret. The E~o~an tobacco industry has aereed that smokt~ ts harmful ,.::~+~,.~ a~ l~ hard ~t work to develop le~s hazardou~ pr~uct~. ~velo~ent nd
Page 2: 1000276220 Log in for more options!
---
Page 3: 1000276221 Log in for more options!
---

Text Control

Highlight Text:

OCR Text Alignment:

Image Control

Image Rotation:

Image Size: