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  • Belgium Releases Numbers for Disposable Vape Crackdown

    Belgium Releases Numbers for Disposable Vape Crackdown

    Belgium’s Federal Public Health Service seized more than 140,000 illegal disposable e-cigarettes in 2025, following a nationwide ban on the sale of disposable vapes that took effect on January 1. Authorities said the seizures reflect a “significant amount” of non-compliant products still circulating on the market.

    Inspectors carried out nearly 2,400 checks across shops, petrol stations, supermarkets, and online retailers, finding illegal vapes in 680 cases. Nearly 600 official reports have been filed, and 18 shops have been temporarily closed. Brussels recorded the highest violation rate, with almost 60% of inspections uncovering illegal sales, while in Flanders, around one in five shops checked was non-compliant. Fines for selling disposable vapes can reach €120,000, though penalties typically range between €800 and €1,000.

  • Azerbaijan Bans E-Cigarettes

    Azerbaijan Bans E-Cigarettes

    Azerbaijan’s parliament approved a comprehensive ban on electronic cigarettes, outlawing their import, export, production, storage, wholesale and retail sale, and use. The legislation, passed in its final reading, amends the country’s “Law On Tobacco and Tobacco Products” and classifies nicotine-containing e-cigarettes as tobacco products, according to local media reports. The law is set to take effect on April 1, 2026.

    The law defines electronic cigarettes broadly as devices that deliver vapor, with or without nicotine, via cartridges or refillable containers, while explicitly excluding heated tobacco products. Lawmakers said the updated definitions are intended to clearly distinguish between e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products in legal and regulatory practice.

    Related amendments will be made to the Tax Code and the Law on Advertising, removing disposable e-cigarettes and e-liquids from the list of excisable goods, cancelling existing tax rates, and aligning advertising restrictions with the new product classifications.

  • BAT Malaysia Designates New Chairman

    BAT Malaysia Designates New Chairman

    British American Tobacco (Malaysia) Bhd redesignated Datuk Sri Mohd Nizom Sairi as chairman of the board, effective January 1, 2026. He succeeds Tan Sri Aseh Che Mat, who will step down on December 31, after completing the maximum nine-year tenure as an independent non-executive director under the group’s governance rules.

    Mohd Nizom was appointed as an independent non-executive director of BAT Malaysia on October 1. He previously spent 38 years with the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia, serving as CEO and director general from 2021 until his retirement from public service in December 2023. He currently serves as independent non-executive chairman of Varia Bhd and as an independent non-executive director of Jati Tinggi Group Bhd.

  • Nicokick and Northerner Increase Commitment to Responsible Retailing

    Nicokick and Northerner said they are strengthening their commitment to responsible and compliant retailing for adult consumers aged 21 and over, citing clearer regulatory direction from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The companies said their focus is on consumer safety, preventing youth access, and maintaining transparency as regulatory oversight of the category increases. Both retailers enforce a nationwide minimum purchase age of 21 and require age and identity verification through third-party provider Veratad, with orders denied or canceled if verification cannot be completed. Nicokick and Northerner said they also limit sales to states where online nicotine pouch sales are permitted and comply with state-specific requirements, including flavor rules. Products sold on their platforms must show evidence of FDA submissions and undergo third-party quality testing.

    “With enforcement ramping up and scrutiny intensifying, responsible retailing isn’t just a nice-to-have; it’s the backbone of credibility, consumer protection, and the viability of the category’s future,” said Laura Leigh Oyler, vice president for regulatory affairs with Haypp Group (parent company of Nicokick and Northerner). “Our ambition is for Nicokick and Northerner to continue standing as paragons of responsibility in the online nicotine retail space.”

    Additional safeguards include sourcing products directly from manufacturers, applying order and SKU limits, using fraud-detection systems, and restricting marketing and promotions to adult audiences. The companies said educational resources and product information are provided to support informed use, positioning responsible retailing as central to the long-term viability of the nicotine pouch category.

  • Juul, NJOY, and Altria Battle Over Public Document Case

    Juul, NJOY, and Altria Battle Over Public Document Case

    Juul Labs asked a federal court in Arizona to block rivals NJOY and Altria from using documents hosted in a public University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) database, according to a joint court filing dated December 24. The dispute arises in an ongoing patent lawsuit, with Juul arguing that some documents were inadvertently disclosed during a large-scale production tied to state settlement agreements and remain protected by attorney–client privilege.

    NJOY and Altria oppose the request, saying the documents have been publicly accessible online for months or years and are therefore no longer privileged. They argue the materials may contain evidence relevant to alleged misconduct in Juul’s patent filings. After failed negotiations, the issue has been submitted to U.S. District Judge John J. Tuchi, who will decide whether the publicly available documents can be excluded from use in the litigation.

  • Korea Tightening Vape Regulations in 2026

    Korea Tightening Vape Regulations in 2026

    South Korea will classify synthetic nicotine e-cigarettes as tobacco under a revised Tobacco Business Act that takes effect on April 24, 2026, marking the first change to the legal definition of tobacco since 1988. The amendment closes a regulatory loophole that previously excluded synthetic nicotine products, bringing them under existing tobacco controls following government studies that found such products contain carcinogens and other harmful substances.

    Under the new framework, synthetic nicotine e-cigarettes will be subject to mandatory health warning images and text on packaging, stricter advertising rules, and use bans in smoke-free areas such as schools, hospitals, and government buildings. Flavor-based marketing aimed at young people will be prohibited, and online sales, social media promotion, external store displays, and sponsorships will be banned. Sales will be limited to designated tobacco retail outlets.

    Additional measures include tighter controls on vending machines, requiring adult verification systems, and banning machines in educational protection zones from February 2026. Health authorities said compliance monitoring manuals are already in place for manufacturers and importers.

  • Polish Police Intercept Balloons Smuggling Cigarettes

    Polish Police Intercept Balloons Smuggling Cigarettes

    Police reported that seven balloons believed to be carrying smuggled cigarettes crossed from Belarus into Poland on Christmas Eve. Four balloons were recovered in the north-eastern Podlaskie region carrying thousands of packets of illegal cigarettes, while three others were tracked in the eastern Lubelskie region. Poland’s Operational Command of the Armed Forces said the balloons were monitored by radar and parts of the airspace were temporarily closed to ensure civilian flight safety.

    Authorities said the incident highlights the continued use of radio-controlled weather balloons by smugglers to move contraband across the Poland–Belarus border amid heightened border security. Similar methods have been detected across the region in recent weeks, with Lithuanian officials arresting 21 suspects over balloon-based cigarette smuggling, and Lithuania declaring a national state of emergency on December 9 following repeated airspace incursions linked to smuggling operations.

  • Hong Kong Expands No-Smoking Areas, Doubles Fines

    Hong Kong Expands No-Smoking Areas, Doubles Fines

    Hong Kong will double fines for smoking offences to HK$3,000 ($385) and expand no-smoking areas from January 1, 2026, under the Tobacco Control Legislation (Amendment) Ordinance 2025, the Department of Health said. The new rules ban smoking within three meters of entrances and exits to childcare centers, schools, hospitals, residential care homes, and specified clinics, and prohibit smoking while queuing, including at public transport boarding areas and outside designated premises.

    Authorities said enforcement and public education efforts have been stepped up at border checkpoints, tourist sites, and transport hubs. The measures are part of a phased rollout of tougher tobacco controls, following earlier steps such as higher penalties for illicit cigarettes and a ban on sales to under-18s, with a further ban on using alternative smoking products like e-cigarettes in public places set to take effect on April 30, 2026.

  • FCTC Expansion Pushing Israel to Consider Tobacco Lawsuits

    FCTC Expansion Pushing Israel to Consider Tobacco Lawsuits

    Israel could see major legal and financial action against tobacco companies following the recent expansion of Article 19 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which includes calling on governments to file civil lawsuits to recover health costs caused by smoking. Attorney Amos Hozner told Arutz Sheva that in Israel, such lawsuits could generate NIS 40 billion ($12.4 billion) or more, given smoking prevalence over 20% and high public health costs. The provision encourages government authorities to pursue civil and administrative remedies against tobacco companies.

    Hozner pointed to high smoking rates among young people in Israel’s haredi community, with up to 54% of yeshiva students and 80% of secondary school students having tried smoking, and 56% of 17- to 24-year-olds smoking regularly.

  • IQOS Opens Flagship Boutique in Philippines

    IQOS Opens Flagship Boutique in Philippines

    PMFTC, the Philippine affiliate of Philip Morris International, opened a new IQOS Boutique in Glorietta, marking its latest flagship retail space in the country. The boutique, which opened on December 19, is designed as a multi-sensory environment showcasing IQOS smoke-free technology for legal-aged nicotine users.

    PMFTC said the Glorietta location reflects its continued focus on smoke-free alternatives and premium retail experiences, featuring interactive elements such as scent and personalization zones, limited-time engraving services, and curated launch activities. Company executives said the boutique aims to provide adult smokers with a dedicated space to learn about and engage with smoke-free options as part of PMI’s broader smoke-free vision in the Philippines.