Tag: COSH

  • COSH Studies Find Approval of Hong Kong Tobacco Control

    COSH Studies Find Approval of Hong Kong Tobacco Control

    As policymakers in Hong Kong continue tightening smoking restrictions, a new survey commissioned by the Hong Kong Council on Smoking and Health (COSH) says that 89% of residents support expanding smoke-free areas, with 60% supporting a smoking ban in all outdoor areas. The University of Hong Kong-led poll of 5,600 respondents found exposure to secondhand smoke remains a common complaint on pavements and roadsides.

    Hong Kong has already doubled fixed penalties for smoking offences to HK$3,000 ($390) and expanded no-smoking zones, with further measures planned, including restrictions on alternative smoking products and potential future steps such as plain packaging, duty stamps, and a ban on flavored tobacco targeted for 2027.

    In a separate modelling likewise commissioned by COSH, the Chinese University of Hong Kong estimated that increasing the tobacco tax to 75% of the retail price, followed by annual hikes, could lower smoking rates below 10% by 2037.

  • Hong Kong Health Org Wants Firm Dates for Tobacco Laws

    Hong Kong Health Org Wants Firm Dates for Tobacco Laws

    Today (January 13), the Hong Kong Council of Smoking and Health (COSH) pressed the government to set a clear timetable for pending tobacco-control measures, warning that several proposals remain stalled ahead of Legislative Council review. COSH chairman Henry Tong said policies such as a ban on non-menthol flavored tobacco, the introduction of plain packaging, and a cigarette stamp duty system are slated for the second quarter of 2027, but lack firm implementation dates. He also urged faster action on banning smoking while walking, arguing that expanding outdoor no-smoking zones—modeled on Shanghai’s fully smoke-free Nanjing Road—could deliver immediate public health benefits.

    Ahead of next month’s fiscal budget, COSH is also calling for a sharp increase in tobacco taxes, recommending a rise to 75% starting in the next fiscal year, followed by automatic annual increases similar to systems used in Australia and the UK. The council further urged officials to define a concrete “smoke-free generation” timeline. Its recommendations are backed by a University of Hong Kong survey of 5,600 respondents conducted between late 2024 and mid-2025, which found nearly half had been exposed to secondhand smoke in the previous week, most commonly in outdoor public spaces such as pavements, crossings, parks, and bars.