PMI's ALP Program: A Decade of Social Impact

Apr.08.2022
PMI's ALP Program: A Decade of Social Impact
PMI's ALP program has been a crucial tool in addressing social impact in tobacco supply chains over the past decade.

For the past decade, PMI's Agricultural Labor Practices (ALP) program has been a vital tool for the company to address social impacts in the tobacco supply chain. Today, PMI released the ALP ten-year report, coinciding with International Human Rights Day and the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labour.

 

The report reaffirms the company's commitment to continue protecting, promoting, and supporting the socio-economic well-being of tobacco farming communities. This includes the ambitious goal of ensuring that 100% of contracted farmers are paid at least the legal minimum wage by 2022, achieving zero child labor in the tobacco supply chain by 2025, ensuring that 100% of contracted farmers earn a living income by 2025, providing basic water to contracted farmers supplying tobacco to PMI by 2025, and achieving basic environmental and personal hygiene by 2030.

 

These ambitious strategies are built upon the important ALP goals to be achieved by 2020. All of our contract farm workers now have safe and decent accommodation and access to personal protective equipment (PPE) for the application of crop protection agents and the prevention of green tobacco sickness.

 

We are keenly aware that poverty and inequality are the root causes of child labor and other human rights issues. By focusing on livelihoods, our goal is to build resilience in agricultural communities, provide new and alternative income sources, and improve income levels and household livelihoods," said Jennifer Motles, Chief Sustainability Officer at PMI.

 

On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the ALP program and the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labour, we have compiled a comprehensive report to reflect on the progress we have made, while acknowledging the urgent need to accelerate our actions like never before.

 

The evolution of PMI's ALP program and their long-term success depend on improving their societal impact both internally and externally. This is why over a decade ago, the company prioritized the welfare of tobacco farming communities. Respect for human rights is a fundamental principle that guides all of their activities.

 

In 2011, tobacco company PMI partnered with the leading NGO in supply chain sustainability, Verité, to design and implement their ALP program. Together, PMI and Verité created an ambitious ALP code consisting of seven key principles that articulate the rights and responsibilities of farmers and workers. Each principle is defined by clear, measurable standards to monitor and demonstrate good labor practices.

 

The plan, scheduled for development in 2018, aims to address underlying issues and bring about significant long-term change in the areas most severely affected. The focus will be on four priority areas: eliminating child labor, ensuring at least minimum wage or agricultural benchmark standards are met, ensuring availability and proper use of personal protective equipment, and ensuring adequate accommodation for all farm workers.

 

PMI is continually communicating the standards of its ALP program to farmers throughout the entire supply chain, making them aware of its expectations. The company and its suppliers have developed the necessary resources to monitor the condition of farms and provide wise solutions for problematic practices. Through specific initiatives such as targeted training on fair working conditions, monitoring of individual farms, and gender empowerment initiatives, the ALP program has already had, and will continue to have, a tangible and positive impact on agricultural communities worldwide.

 

Recently Reached Milestone.

 

Throughout 2020, PMI remained steadfastly committed to preventing instances of child labor in the tobacco supply chain, despite the impact of COVID-19 and related restrictions on its efforts. The company introduced new approaches to addressing systemic issues, raised awareness, and isolated cases of child labor on its contracted farms. In 2020, PMI continued its efforts to eliminate the remaining 3.5% prevalence of child labor on its contracted farms.

 

In 2020, PMI collaborated with third-party experts to conduct a research study on living incomes, analyzing the current income of farmers and developing strategies to achieve the goal of providing livelihood incomes to 100% of contract farmers supplying tobacco to PMI. As of 2020, 48% of contract farmers earned at least a livelihood income.

 

Finally, 2020 marked the achievement of two important ALP goals for PMI. The first is to provide safe and decent housing for contracted farmers. The second is to ensure adequate provision of personal protective equipment for the application of crop protection agents and prevention of green tobacco disease for all tobacco workers.

 

Original Article Link:

 

Philip Morris International: 10 years of Agricultural Labor Practice program anniversary.

 


Disclaimer

This article is provided solely for professional research, industry discussion, and informational purposes. Any references to brands, companies, products, technologies, or policies are made for factual reporting and analytical purposes only, and do not constitute endorsement, recommendation, promotion, or advertising by 2Firsts.

Nicotine-containing products, including but not limited to cigarettes, e-cigarettes, heated tobacco products, and nicotine pouches, carry significant health risks. Readers are responsible for complying with all applicable laws and regulations in their respective jurisdictions, including age restrictions and access limitations.

The information contained in this article should not be regarded as investment, legal, medical, regulatory, or commercial advice. While 2Firsts strives to ensure the accuracy and reliability of its content, it does not assume liability for any direct or indirect loss arising from errors, omissions, inaccuracies, or reliance on the information contained herein.

This article is not intended for individuals below the legal age for accessing tobacco or nicotine-related information in their jurisdiction.

 

Copyright Notice

This article is either original content produced by 2Firsts or content reproduced, translated, summarized, or adapted from third-party sources with attribution where applicable. The intellectual property rights of the original content remain with 2Firsts or the respective original rights holders.

No individual or organization may copy, reproduce, distribute, republish, modify, translate, or otherwise use this content without prior authorization. Any unauthorized use may result in legal action.

For copyright-related inquiries, corrections, or removal requests, please contact: info@2firsts.com.

 

AI-Assisted Translation and Editing Notice

Portions of this article may have been translated, edited, or reviewed with the assistance of artificial intelligence tools to improve efficiency and readability. Due to the limitations of AI-assisted translation and editing, discrepancies, omissions, or inaccuracies may exist when compared with the original source.

Where applicable, readers are advised to refer to the original source for the most complete and accurate information. If you identify any errors or believe that any content infringes upon your rights, please contact us at info@2firsts.com, and we will review and address the matter promptly.

Italy Fines PMI €7 Million Over Misleading ‘Smoke-Free Future’ Marketing Claims
Italy Fines PMI €7 Million Over Misleading ‘Smoke-Free Future’ Marketing Claims
Italy’s Competition and Market Authority (AGCM) has fined Philip Morris Italia €7 million, finding that the company’s use of “smoke-free future” and related claims in promoting products such as IQOS, VEEV and ZYN could mislead consumers.
Jun.16
FDA Tobacco Center Plans Faster Review Process for Certain Supplemental PMTAs
FDA Tobacco Center Plans Faster Review Process for Certain Supplemental PMTAs
FDA Center for Tobacco Products Acting Director Bret Koplow issued a statement on May 7 outlining new steps to accelerate tobacco product premarket application review. The statement said CTP reduced the backlog of applications by approximately 70% in 2025 and that there is no longer a queue for PMTAs pending acceptance review.
May.09 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Israel’s Finance Ministry Advances New Tax Plan for Vapes, Tobacco Pouches and Nicotine Pouches
Israel’s Finance Ministry Advances New Tax Plan for Vapes, Tobacco Pouches and Nicotine Pouches
Israel’s Finance Ministry is advancing a new bill to tax e-cigarettes, tobacco pouches and nicotine pouches. According to the report, once approved by the Knesset Finance Committee, the initiative would only require the signature of Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich to take effect. The plan would lower the tax on vape liquid while introducing new taxes on vape devices and on tobacco and nicotine pouches.
Apr.22 by 2FIRSTS.ai
South Korea’s Cigarette Smoking Rate Falls to 17.9%, E-Cigarette Use Continues to Rise
South Korea’s Cigarette Smoking Rate Falls to 17.9%, E-Cigarette Use Continues to Rise
Data released by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) showed South Korea’s conventional cigarette smoking rate fell to 17.9% in 2025, while heated tobacco and liquid e-cigarette use continued to rise, particularly among young adults and women.
Jun.01
Sweden Becomes First EU Country to Reach Smoke-Free Status as Daily Smoking Falls to 4.8%
Sweden Becomes First EU Country to Reach Smoke-Free Status as Daily Smoking Falls to 4.8%
According to the latest CAN report and multiple media reports, Sweden’s daily smoking rate fell to 4.8% in 2025, below the commonly used 5% smoke-free threshold, making it the first EU country to reach that benchmark.
News
Jun.05
Revised Tobacco Business Act to Take Effect in South Korea, Banning Online Sales of Liquid Vapes
Revised Tobacco Business Act to Take Effect in South Korea, Banning Online Sales of Liquid Vapes
South Korea’s Ministry of Health and Welfare will implement a partial revision of the Tobacco Business Act on April 24. The scope will expand from products made with “tobacco leaves” to all products manufactured with natural or synthetic nicotine. Synthetic nicotine liquid e-cigarettes, which had previously been treated as industrial products and were freely sold and advertised online, will from April 24 be subject to the same regulations as ordinary tobacco products.
Apr.23 by 2FIRSTS.ai