Philip Morris International CEO André Calantzopoulos spoke at the
Concordia Annual Summit in New York City, a nonpartisan forum event taking
place alongside the United Nations General Assembly.
André said PMI could only bring
about change if it provided people with real alternatives.
Speaking about the pressing
challenges which face the world today, he stressed that government action alone
would not be enough to convince people to change their behavior.
In a Concordia panel discussion titled “Making P3s Work (for the
Private Sector)”, he joined Dr. Kristin Lord (President & CEO of IREX) and
Rachel Duan (President & CEO of GE’s Global Growth Organization).
As CEO of PMI, Calantzopoulos
is spearheading the company’s transformation from selling cigarettes to smoke-free
alternatives. There are currently more than 1 billion smokers in the world, so
creating a smoke-free world will not be easy. But helping these people to
change their behavior for the greater good is the sort of challenge being faced
by many other companies and industries.
Here is the video of André Calantzopoulos’s speech:
He said: “We talk about climate
change quite a lot, but there are so many other challenges and stresses on the
human system – from soils becoming less productive to oceans. Everybody says we
need more regulations, but at the end of the day, it is to convince people
around the world to behave differently.
“To change people to use
smoke-free products or solar panels is not an easy thing to do. You need to
explain to people constantly what the issue is, and give them alternatives. And
then give them incentives, fiscal and regulatory (frameworks), and hope this
will happen. Just by hoping governments will do it doesn’t work, we need the
private sector and NGOs and forums like these.”
Governments alone can’t expect
people to change without giving them viable alternatives – and they require
incentives to use these alternatives.
André continued: “At a certain
stage, in order to change, you need to change attitudes. Criticizing tobacco
won’t make consumers change.”
He stressed the need for
international organizations to work at a local level to make the goals of
transformation a reality. Although PMI is working hard to fulfill its vision of
a smoke-free future, it cannot do it alone.
Explaining the challenges of
global transformations, where markets and culture can differ widely, he said:
“You need partnerships with other companies and local NGOs that help this
transformation – you can put the money in, you can put the effort in, but you
need to be local. And if you don’t have a presence in the country and make
things happen, things won’t happen.”
Originally from www.pmi.com
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