Tag: tobacco control

  • Concerns Loom Over S. Africa Tobacco Control Bill

    Concerns Loom Over S. Africa Tobacco Control Bill

    South Africa’s tobacco policy debate sharpened this week after Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana used his Budget speech to warn that illicit trade is inflicting serious damage on the economy, while hours later the Department of Health faced pointed pushback in Parliament over whether its Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill adequately addresses that crisis. Appearing before the Portfolio Committee on Health, officials defended the Bill’s public health rationale, arguing it does not ban cigarettes and that smoking imposes greater economic costs than it generates. However, MPs from multiple parties pressed the Department on estimates that as much as 70% of the cigarette market may be illicit, questioning whether the proposed measures meaningfully target the dominant illegal segment.

    Lawmakers repeatedly raised concerns about enforcement capacity, proportionality, and the risk that additional regulatory burdens — such as plain packaging and stricter penalties — could further advantage criminal syndicates if illicit trade remains unchecked. The Department leaned on international precedent and South Africa’s obligations under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, while some MPs called for greater differentiation between combustible and non-combustible products and more realistic alignment with local enforcement realities.

  • Malaysian Vape Ban Would Leave 1.4M Users in Limbo

    Malaysian Vape Ban Would Leave 1.4M Users in Limbo

    Malaysia is moving toward a nationwide vape ban that could leave an estimated 1.4 million adult users in limbo, as policymakers weigh stricter enforcement under the Control of Smoking Products for Public Health Act 2024 and a possible phase-out of open and closed pod systems by 2026. While the government cites concerns over youth uptake and illicit drug-laced liquids, consumer groups and some public health experts warn that prohibition may drive sales underground or push former smokers back to combustible cigarettes, which remain far more prevalent among Malaysia’s 4.8 million smokers.

  • De Facto Flavor Ban Threatens German Harm Reduction

    De Facto Flavor Ban Threatens German Harm Reduction

    Germany is advancing a draft regulation to ban menthol and other vape flavors containing synthetic cooling agents, with implementation possible in 2026 under the Federal Ministry for Agriculture and Food, according to Filter magazine. The Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) says cooling agents may make vaping easier to inhale and potentially increase nicotine intake, particularly among youth, though it acknowledges that coolants are “poorly researched,” with “very limited” data to back these claims.

    Critics, including the Bundesverband Rauchfreie Alternative, argue the measure amounts to a de facto flavor ban because cooling agents are widely used in e-liquids. They warn it could undermine harm-reduction efforts in Germany, where smoking rates remain high despite a 2020 menthol cigarette ban aligned with European Union rules.

    Opponents say restricting flavored vapes risks pushing consumers back to combustible cigarettes or into illicit markets. Heino Stover, professor of social science addiction research at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, told Filter that the “scientific evidence is not there” to warrant such a sweeping ban. “A ban on flavors will not help decrease the high smoking prevalence,” he said. Germany’s aim of reducing its smoking rate to 5% or below by 2040 already seemed ‘unrealistic’ before the proposed ban; it now looks even more unrealistic.”

    The draft remains under review.

  • UK’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill to Enter Report Stage

    UK’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill to Enter Report Stage

    Members of the House of Lords will begin report-stage scrutiny of the UK’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill tomorrow (Feb. 24), marking a further phase of detailed examination and amendments. The legislation proposes a generational smoking ban that would make it illegal to sell tobacco to anyone born on or after January 1, 2009, with the legal age rising by one year annually from 2027, alongside tighter regulation of vapes and other nicotine products, including potential advertising restrictions.

    Peers are suggesting amendments covering a possible increase in the sales age to 21, stricter age verification requirements, expanded powers to restrict product sales, greater transparency of tobacco sales data, and the creation of a youth vaping and waste taskforce. For retailers, particularly convenience stores, the bill could significantly alter compliance requirements, complicating age checks as different thresholds apply across tobacco, alcohol and other age-restricted categories.

  • Jamaica Ups Cigarette Tax 2 Cents per Stick

    Jamaica Ups Cigarette Tax 2 Cents per Stick

    Jamaica will increase the Special Consumption Tax (SCT) on cigarettes from J$17 to J$20 ($0.11 to $0.13) per stick effective May 1, a move expected to generate approximately $1.1 billion ($7 million) in additional revenue. The measure aligns with Jamaica’s commitments under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and comes as lawmakers continue deliberations on broader tobacco control legislation, including regulations on advertising and electronic nicotine delivery systems.

  • Bhutan Reviews Tobacco Act as Vaping Spikes

    Bhutan Reviews Tobacco Act as Vaping Spikes

    The National Council of Bhutan and the Bhutan Food and Drug Authority are reviewing the Tobacco Control Act of Bhutan to better regulate emerging products such as e-cigarettes and synthetic nicotine, following a sharp rise in imports and youth use. Trade data show e-cigarette imports surged from 994 units in 2022 to 448,086 units in 2025, valued at Nu 48.5 million ($533,000), while the National Health Survey 2023 reported overall tobacco use prevalence at 31.4%, with nearly one in five users also vaping. Officials say the amendments will clarify enforcement, strengthen inter-agency coordination, introduce product safety and nicotine limits, and enhance protections for minors, in line with Bhutan’s commitments under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The proposed changes would also consolidate penalties, define compliance obligations for importers and retailers, and empower local authorities, marking the fourth revision of the law since its adoption in 2010.

  • 90% of Omanis Favor Tobacco Tax Hike

    90% of Omanis Favor Tobacco Tax Hike

    Oman’s Ministry of Health said that nearly 90% of its citizens support increasing taxes on tobacco products and banning smoking in open public spaces, according to findings from the 2025 National Survey on Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs). Minister of Interior Sayyid Dr. Sultan Yaarub Al Busaidi said the survey showed that one in six adult males currently uses tobacco, with manufactured cigarettes, pipes and shisha being the most common forms, while about 2% use e-cigarettes or smokeless tobacco. Conducted in collaboration with the World Health Organization, the nationwide study of more than 10,000 people is expected to “guide evidence-based health policies aligned with Oman Vision 2040 and global targets to reduce premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases.”

  • Singapore’s Tobacco Taxes Increase 20% Today

    Singapore’s Tobacco Taxes Increase 20% Today

    Beginning today (Feb. 12), Singapore is increasing tobacco excise duties by 20% across all tobacco products as part of Budget 2026 measures aimed at reducing smoking rates. Duties on cigarettes, cigars, and similar products will rise from S49.1 cents to S58.9 cents ($0.39 to $0.47) per stick, while taxes on smokeless tobacco and beedies will increase from S$378 per kg to S$454 per kg ($$299 to $359). Duties on unmanufactured and cut tobacco, as well as other tobacco refuse products, will rise from S$446 per kg to S$535 per kg ($352 to $423).

    The move builds on earlier a 10% tax hike in 2018 and a 15% hike in 2023, and complements broader tobacco-control policies, including standardized packaging and expanded smoke-free public spaces. Singapore’s daily smoking rate has steadily declined, reaching a record low of 8.4% in 2024, according to government health survey data.

  • Estonian Groups Want Disposable Vapes Banned by 2027

    Estonian Groups Want Disposable Vapes Banned by 2027

    A coalition of 50 organizations and school leaders, led by the Estonian Green Movement, submitted a public appeal to several Estonian government ministries calling for a nationwide ban on disposable e-cigarettes by 2027. The appeal, sent to the Ministries of Social Affairs, Climate, Economic Affairs and Communications, and Justice and Digital Affairs, argues that single-use vapes pose growing risks to youth health, contribute to nicotine addiction, and create significant environmental waste due to discarded batteries and plastics. The coalition also highlighted public backing for the measure, noting that a related initiative gathered more than 2,000 signatures by the end of 2025, and urged authorities to prohibit disposable devices while allowing stricter regulation of reusable alternatives.

  • NSW Increasing Tobacco-Inspector Staff by 62%

    NSW Increasing Tobacco-Inspector Staff by 62%

    New South Wales (Australia) will recruit 30 additional full-time tobacco inspectors to strengthen the state’s Centre for Regulation & Enforcement, expanding the statewide compliance team to 78 staff as authorities intensify efforts against illicit tobacco and vaping products. Since tougher enforcement laws took effect in November 2025, NSW Health and police have closed 66 retailers, including five Sydney Inner West tobacconists last week, while January inspections seized approximately 560,000 cigarettes, 98 kilograms of illicit tobacco, and more than 6,000 illegal vaping products valued at about A$830,000 ($589,000). The government is advancing further legislative measures, including landlord liability provisions and penalties exceeding A$1.5 million ($1.1 million) and seven years’ imprisonment for commercial-scale illicit tobacco offences, as officials warn high federal excise taxes continue to drive demand for illegal products and fuel evolving retail tactics such as QR code and social media-based sales.