Tag: vape ban

  • Virginia Defends Flavored Vape Ban in Federal Court

    Virginia Defends Flavored Vape Ban in Federal Court

    Virginia’s Attorney General Jason S. Miyares and the state’s tax commissioner urged a federal court to reject a lawsuit challenging the state’s ban on unapproved e-cigarettes, arguing the plaintiffs lack standing because their products are illegal under federal law. In filings, Virginia contended that Novo Distro Inc. and Tobacco Hut and Vape Fairfax Inc. cannot claim injury or seek an injunction since their products are unapproved by the FDA. The state emphasized that neither the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) nor the Tobacco Control Act preempts state authority to regulate tobacco, and that the ban applies equally to all sellers, prioritizing public health.

    The plaintiffs argue that the law disadvantages small businesses in favor of large tobacco companies. Virginia maintains that the statute simply requires FDA approval for all products and is not arbitrary, reflecting a public health-driven standard rather than favoritism.

  • Wales Backs Generational Tobacco Ban

    Wales Backs Generational Tobacco Ban

    Members of the Senedd, Wales’ devolved parliament, have approved UK government plans to prohibit the sale of tobacco products to anyone born after 1 January 2009. The UK-wide Tobacco and Vapes Bill would also tighten regulations on vaping, including advertising restrictions, and a review of e-cigarette packaging.

    Health Minister Sarah Murphy described the legislation as a “unique opportunity” to tackle smoking, a leading cause of disease and premature death in Wales. The vote followed a legislative consent motion, meaning the Welsh Parliament agreed to Westminster passing a law that affects areas devolved to Wales. The motion passed 36 to 9, with two abstentions.

  • Youth-Focused Bans Hurt Older Vapers: Haypp Survey

    Youth-Focused Bans Hurt Older Vapers: Haypp Survey

    “Much of the debate on the Tobacco and Vapes Bill is focused on restricting youth access to vapes,” Haypp Group said in a press release announcing its latest survey. “While there are legitimate concerns around underage access to vapes, the introduction of broad product restrictions or bans may inadvertently exclude older segments of the population and impact the number of older smokers switching to vapes.” 

    In surveying 501 adult vape users in the UK, Haypp data found 87% of vapers aged 55 and over started vaping to quit smoking, compared with much lower rates in younger groups. The over-55 cohort was also the most positive about switching, with 92% saying they felt better after moving from cigarettes, and 55% citing health as the main benefit.

    The findings suggest older smokers—who face higher long-term health risks—could be disproportionately affected by product bans that limit access to regulated alternatives. Haypp said policymakers should consider more targeted youth protections while preserving access and accurate information for adult smokers seeking to switch.

  • We are no longer in the world of ‘unintended consequences’ – Why Restricting Vape Flavors Risks Driving Smokers Back to Cigarettes

    We are no longer in the world of ‘unintended consequences’ – Why Restricting Vape Flavors Risks Driving Smokers Back to Cigarettes

    By Markus Lindblad, Head of External Affairs, Haypp Group

    Across the world, governments are introducing increasingly tough policies to reduce smoking rates amongst adult populations and prevent young people from accessing nicotine products. 

    In the UK, we have the introduction of one of the strongest pieces of anti-tobacco legislation in the world with the Tobacco and Vapes Bill. This will introduce a generational smoking ban, making it illegal to sell tobacco products to anyone born after 1 January 2009. Other measures included in the bill include the introduction of a licensing scheme for the retail of tobacco and nicotine products and new limits on the advertising and promotion of nicotine products. 

    Many of the measures proposed in the bill will indeed help the UK make progress towards a smoke-free future, and prevent youth access to nicotine products, however, others are almost certain to be counterproductive and lead to bad outcomes. 

    Foremost among these is a clause granting the Secretary of State powers to restrict the flavor of tobacco and nicotine products. I believe that using these powers to ban flavors would be a mistake. There are legitimate concerns about youth access to vapes or nicotine pouches, and there is a consensus that this issue needs to be addressed, but the international evidence shows us that restricting flavors is not the way to go about it. 

    Over the past two years, we have seen the publication of results from a number of large-scale studies on the impact of flavor bans at the state level in the USA. The results should give policymakers pause. 

    A study published this year in the Journal of the American Medical Association examined how flavor bans in seven U.S. states affected tobacco use. Researchers looked at data from 2013 to 2023 and found that while flavor restriction policies were associated with some reductions in e-cigarette use, there were also increases in cigarette use. 

    A 2024 study from the USA examined a dataset of 376,963 young adults (age 18 to 29 years) and found that state restrictions on flavored vape sales were associated with a 3.6 percentage point reduction in daily vaping, but also a 2.2 percentage point increase in daily smoking among young people. This increase in smoking rates, the authors highlight, potentially offsets any public health gains that might have been achieved by the flavor ban.

    Additional research from the Yale School of Public Health paints a similar picture. Using retail sales data from 44 US states, researchers discovered that following the introduction of flavor restrictions, cigarette sales rose as vape sales declined. In other words, when states restrict the availability of flavored vapes, they inadvertently push some smokers back to cigarettes, a behavior that is much worse in terms of health outcomes. 

    In each case, the intended outcome was to reduce vaping, but there was an unintentional increase in cigarette smoking. This is not a hypothetical outcome; it is observable and measurable in the data in each of the studies.

    The public debate around vape flavors often focuses on youth appeal, but it overlooks a critical dimension: the importance of flavors in helping adult smokers quit and stay smoke-free. Flavors aren’t just a marketing tool; they are a behavioral and psychological aid that help smokers make the transition away from cigarettes. 

    Our own research at Haypp underscores this point clearly. In a recent survey of 500 UK vapers, nearly one-third (30%) said that taste is one of the main advantages of vapes compared with other nicotine products. 28% said that flavor is the most important factor they consider when choosing a vape. These are not marginal preferences; they are decisive drivers of behavior. When asked how they would respond if a flavor ban were introduced, only 26% of vapers said they would continue to vape, while almost as many, 24%, said they would switch back to cigarettes. This finding should alarm anyone concerned with public health. It suggests that for UK vapers, a flavor ban may push a significant proportion of them back to a much more dangerous habit.

    Flavors also play a deeper psychological role in the process of smoking cessation. They help define the difference between smoking and alternative nicotine use, providing a sensory boundary that supports behavioral change. When a smoker switches to vaping, the experience of flavor, combined with the absence of smoke and tar, creates a sense of progress and separation from the old habit. Removing that variety reduces satisfaction, increases relapse risk, and ultimately undermines harm-reduction goals.

    The challenge for policymakers, then, is not whether to act but how to act responsibly. Blanket bans may appear decisive, but they are blunt instruments that often produce counterproductive outcomes. Given the breadth of evidence now available, we are no longer speaking about unintended consequences. The data shows that a ban on flavors will most likely lead to an increase in smoking rates. A more effective approach would focus on strict enforcement of age-verification measures, strict rules on responsible marketing, and clear product labelling, measures that address youth access directly without depriving adult smokers of an effective tool to quit. Youth access needs to be tackled, but we need to remember that for a smoker trying to quit, flavors are not a loophole; they are a lifeline. 

  • Uzbekistan Imposes Harsh Criminal Penalties on E-Cigarette Trade

    Uzbekistan Imposes Harsh Criminal Penalties on E-Cigarette Trade

    Uzbekistan enacted strict amendments to its Criminal Code, introducing severe penalties for the import, export, production, and sale of e-cigarettes and other nicotine-containing devices, according to local media reports. The nationwide ban now criminalizes all forms of circulation, including purchase, storage, and transportation. Large-scale violations or repeat offenses after administrative penalties can result in fines, corrective labor, restrictions of freedom, or up to five years’ imprisonment.

    Authorities say individuals may avoid prosecution if they self-report and surrender prohibited products voluntarily.

  • Russian Deputies Call for Complete National Vape Ban

    Russian Deputies Call for Complete National Vape Ban

    A group of State Duma deputies proposed amendments to completely ban the sale of vapes and e-liquids in Russia, while also introducing stricter penalties for illegal trafficking and involving minors in nicotine use. The amendments, prepared by deputies led by Yaroslav Nilov, Yana Lantratova, and Nina Ostanina, have been submitted for consideration to relevant working groups and reviewed by RBC.

    The proposal is linked to the second reading of a bill on licensing the retail trade in tobacco and nicotine products. Deputies highlighted that the ban aligns with President Vladimir Putin’s call for radical measures to protect children and young people from vaping risks. The amendments were sent to multiple inter-factional working groups focusing on public health, moral education, and the protection of traditional Russian values.

    The initiative has been framed as a long-overdue measure to safeguard public health, according to Lantratova, who emphasized that partial restrictions are insufficient. The current bill, submitted by the government in September 2025, sets a licensing framework for retail sales of tobacco and nicotine products, with unlicensed sales prohibited from September 1, 2026, and a transition period until September 1, 2027. The Ministry of Finance has also proposed giving regional authorities the power to impose local bans on vape sales, notifying the Federal Service for Alcohol Tobacco Control accordingly.

  • WHO Urges Vietnam to Ban Vapes and HTP Investment

    WHO Urges Vietnam to Ban Vapes and HTP Investment

    The World Health Organization recommended that Vietnam explicitly classify e-cigarette and heated tobacco trade as prohibited sectors in its amended Investment Law, leaving no exceptions. The call comes as the law is under parliamentary review, with the draft currently not listing these products as banned.

    WHO warned that the omission contradicts National Assembly Resolution 173, effective January 2025, which already prohibits the production, trading, and import of these products. The agency stressed that a clear, comprehensive ban is essential to protect public health and prevent regulatory loopholes.

    Data from Bach Mai Hospital indicate a 70% drop in emergency visits related to new-generation tobacco since the ban. WHO and Vietnam’s Ministry of Health oppose proposals allowing production for export, citing risks of smuggling and enforcement challenges.

  • Luxembourg Snus Law Draws Criticism as ‘De Facto Ban’

    Luxembourg Snus Law Draws Criticism as ‘De Facto Ban’

    Luxembourg-based snus producer Heintz Van Landewyck criticized the country’s new anti-tobacco legislation, which effectively removes snus from the domestic market despite not explicitly banning it. The law, approved in late October, limits nicotine in snus pouches to just 0.048 mg per pouch—roughly the amount naturally found in two aubergines (eggplants)—making the product unappealing to consumers seeking nicotine.

    Georges Krombach, the company’s Chief Commercial Officer, warned that the legislation will push consumers to buy snus online, fueling the black market. He described the situation as an “industrial nightmare,” noting that the company had recently invested over €1 million in tax-compliant machinery for domestic production.

    Heintz Van Landewyck had supported age restrictions, warning labels, a nicotine range of 6–16 mg per pouch, and excise taxes, but the new limits force the company to relocate domestic production abroad, with a new factory planned in Trier, Germany.

    While the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR) and Pirate Party echoed concerns about market disruption, other lawmakers, including CSV MP Françoise Kemp, stressed that nicotine is addictive and warned that flavored products pose risks to youth.

    Krombach expressed hope that Luxembourg might reconsider the nicotine limit to allow legal domestic sales, rather than driving consumers to foreign online sources.

  • ‘Cappuccino Strip’ Has Illicit Tobacco Hiding in Plain Site: Story  

    ‘Cappuccino Strip’ Has Illicit Tobacco Hiding in Plain Site: Story  

    Today (November 26), the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), published a story titled “Why convenience stores along Fremantle cafe strip are the front line of WA’s illegal tobacco trade,” highlighting how Australia’s famous “cappuccino strip” has become a hub for illegal tobacco sales, with dozens of convenience stores quietly selling unlicensed cigarettes and loose tobacco.

    The story says each store is a carbon copy of the others, with scant products on the shelves, with the illicit money-making products that keep the store open hidden in cabinets and under counters. Despite widespread concern, Western Australian authorities lack the legal power to immediately shut down offenders, allowing the trade to flourish in plain sight.

    The Australian Council on Smoking and Health (ACOSH) has long called for updated laws, pointing to South Australia and Queensland, where tougher enforcement and heavy fines have successfully curtailed illicit sales. ACOSH chief Laura Hunter described the problem as an enforcement issue, not a tax one.

    WA Health reports nearly one million cigarettes and 160 kg of loose tobacco seized in the past two years, but these figures pale in comparison to federal-level busts. Nationwide, tobacco excise revenue has fallen from A$16 billion ($10.4 billion) in 2019 to A$7.4 billion ($4.8 billion)  this year, while major retailers like Coles and Woolworths have lost over half their tobacco revenue, leaving the market open to criminal operators.

    Local leaders are exploring measures to curb the spread. Fremantle Mayor Ben Lawver noted that the city has 16 convenience-type shops in the CBD alone and is considering rezoning them as discretionary uses, giving the council some control over new openings.

    In the meantime, the illicit tobacco trade continues to thrive, with limited state resources available to enforce existing laws, the story concluded.

  • Kazakhstan to Ease Ban on Hookahs, Not Vapes

    Kazakhstan to Ease Ban on Hookahs, Not Vapes

    Kazakhstan may ease restrictions on hookah use, according to Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs Sanzhar Adilov. He confirmed that the issue is under review, with a final decision to be made after assessments and public hearings. Officials are considering allowing the import of hookah equipment, permitting hookah use in entertainment venues, and defining a list of substances and conditions for use.

    Adilov emphasized that the current ban on vapes will remain in place, with additional measures introduced to strengthen criminal penalties for their sale and transport. “On vaping, our position is clear: increased responsibility and zero tolerance,” he said.