Tag: vape

  • IKE Tech Invited to FDA Roundtable on PMTA Submissions

    IKE Tech Invited to FDA Roundtable on PMTA Submissions

    IKE Tech LLC has been invited by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to participate in an invitation-only roundtable discussion with small electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) manufacturers focused on Premarket Tobacco Product Application (PMTA) submissions. The news was announced by Ispire Technology, a founding partner of IKE Tech.

    The February 10 forum, limited to 30 companies nationwide, is designed to gather direct industry feedback on the PMTA process, with IKE Tech selected to participate in the Manufacturing Controls panel examining operational challenges and compliance practices. The company is developing a blockchain-enabled, Bluetooth-based age-gating system intended to verify legal-age access at the point of use, which has been submitted as a component PMTA for an interoperable age-verification technology. The FDA session is expected to inform future regulatory guidance and potential refinements to the PMTA review framework.

  • Secondhand Vape Plumes May Form Lung-Damaging Free Radicals: Study

    Secondhand Vape Plumes May Form Lung-Damaging Free Radicals: Study

    A laboratory study published in Environmental Science & Technology raised new questions about the potential risks of secondhand exposure to e-cigarette aerosols, finding that aged vape emissions may contain ultrafine particles, metals, and highly reactive compounds capable of generating free radicals linked to lung tissue damage. Researchers from the University of California, Riverside, led by Ying-Hsuan Lin, simulated indoor vaping conditions and found that aerosol particles contained metals including iron, aluminum, zinc, and trace levels of lead, arsenic, and tin. The study also reported that ultrafine particles, which can penetrate deep into the lungs, showed significantly higher concentrations of reactive peroxide compounds and produced substantially greater levels of free radicals when exposed to simulated lung fluid.

    The findings add to the growing body of research examining indoor air chemistry associated with vaping, particularly interactions between aerosol emissions and environmental ozone. While conducted under controlled laboratory conditions using simplified e-liquid formulations without nicotine, the researchers said the results highlight the need for further real-world and epidemiological studies to better understand potential health impacts of secondhand vape exposure.

  • VPZ Announces UK Expansion Plans

    VPZ Announces UK Expansion Plans

    UK vape specialist retailer VPZ announced a multi-million-pound investment program to expand domestic manufacturing, strengthen supply-chain controls, and create hundreds of jobs across its retail and logistics network, according to Convenience Store. The plan includes adding a fifth production line at its UK facility, opening 40 new stores in 2026, and establishing a bonded warehouse at its Edinburgh headquarters to support compliance, enforcement, and preparation for the planned vape tax in October. VPZ said the investment is aimed at improving resilience, supporting regulatory requirements, and distinguishing compliant retailers from illegal operators amid record seizures of illicit vapes by authorities.

  • Vietnam Tightens School Accountability in Vape Crackdown

    Vietnam Tightens School Accountability in Vape Crackdown

    Vietnam introduced fines of up to VND10 million ($380) for school principals if students are caught using e-cigarettes or heated tobacco products on campus, under Decree 371 issued by the Ministry of Health. The measure, the first to assign direct legal responsibility to school leaders, comes as youth vaping among ages 13–17 rose sharply from 2.6% in 2019 to 8.1% in 2023. Students face fines of VND3–5 million ($114 to $190), with all products confiscated and destroyed, while large-scale illegal production or trade may trigger criminal penalties of up to VND1 billion ($38,000) or five years in prison.

    The enforcement framework supports Vietnam’s nationwide ban on e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products starting in 2025, with early data showing declines in vaping-related cases and hospitalizations, signaling increased regulatory pressure on alternative nicotine products.

  • German Tobacco Use Drops, as ‘Substitutes’ Rise 18%

    German Tobacco Use Drops, as ‘Substitutes’ Rise 18%

    Germany’s taxed cigarette volumes edged higher in 2025, even as long-term tobacco consumption continued to decline, according to preliminary data from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis). A total of 66.4 billion cigarettes were taxed during the year, up 0.2% (0.1 billion cigarettes) from 2024, but less than half the 146.5 billion recorded in 1991. Per capita cigarette consumption stood at 795 cigarettes in 2025, compared with 1,831 in 1991. Sales of fine-cut tobacco fell 1.2% year on year to 24,864 tons, while cigars and cigarillos declined 6.6% to 2.1 billion units. Hookah tobacco sales dropped 8.8% to 1,162 tons, despite regulatory changes allowing larger pack sizes again, while pipe tobacco rose 2.9% to 323 tons. In contrast, taxed volumes of tobacco substitute products such as e-cigarette liquids increased sharply, rising 18.2% year on year to 1.5 million liters, reflecting continued growth in non-combustible alternatives under Germany’s evolving tobacco tax regime.

  • Seoul Rolling Out Public Smoking Booths

    Seoul Rolling Out Public Smoking Booths

    Seoul’s Gangnam District began rolling out newly designed “separated smoking booths” along major commercial streets to curb secondhand smoke and reduce friction between smokers and pedestrians, officials said today (January 22). The first installations physically separate smokers from passersby and also distinguish between conventional cigarettes and e-cigarettes, assigning each to different structures. Fully enclosed cigarette booths feature smoke-control systems, air purifiers, and air curtains, while semi-open e-cigarette booths emphasize ventilation and filtration. District officials said the initiative aims to improve street cleanliness and walkability in high-traffic areas, with expansion to be considered based on public response.

  • Vietnam Looking to Tighten Tobacco Regs

    Vietnam Looking to Tighten Tobacco Regs

    Vietnam’s Ministry of Health is seeking public feedback on a draft amendment to the Law on Tobacco Harm Prevention that would significantly tighten regulations and close gaps in the current legal framework, according to Vietnam News. The proposed amendments prioritize public health over economic interests, align with Party and Politburo resolutions on health protection, and aim to fully meet Vietnam’s obligations under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Key measures include banning the holding, transport, storage, advertising, promotion and use of electronic cigarettes and heated tobacco products; prohibiting the display of tobacco products at retail outlets; expanding smoke-free venues; and increasing health warning requirements on packaging. The draft also introduces clear legal definitions for e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products, strengthens responsibilities of government agencies and local authorities, and adds new prohibitions on producing or trading components used to assemble such products, with a focus on protecting women, children and public health overall.

  • Retailers Push New Welsh Govt. to Focus on Illicit Crime

    Retailers Push New Welsh Govt. to Focus on Illicit Crime

    Members of the Federation of Independent Retailers (the Fed) are urging the next Welsh government, due to be formed after the May election, to introduce a £6,500 grant to help independent retailers install modern CCTV systems to tackle rising retail crime. The organization argues that better enforcement would help curb the sale of illicit tobacco and vapes, protect legitimate retailers, and disrupt organized crime networks linked to the black market.

    The call mirrors a similar request the Fed made recently to the Scottish government and forms part of three manifesto proposals submitted to Welsh political parties ahead of the vote. The Fed is also seeking the creation and funding of a dedicated Retail Crime Taskforce in Wales, modeled on Scotland’s, alongside ring-fenced funding for trading standards officers to crack down on rogue trading.

    Fed Welsh president Clive Birkby said the organization wants small independent shops placed “at the heart” of the next government’s agenda, with urgent action on retail crime, business rates, and the fair rollout of Wales’ deposit return scheme.

  • Cabbacis Hosting Webinar Outlining its $7.5M Offering

    Cabbacis Hosting Webinar Outlining its $7.5M Offering

    Cabbacis announced it will host an investor webinar on January 22 at 11:30 EST as part of its ongoing $7.5 million Regulation A offering. During the session, CEO and chairman Joseph Pandolfino will outline the company’s commercialization strategy for its patented iBlend cigarettes and vaporizer pods, which combine very-low-nicotine tobacco with non-intoxicating hemp and are positioned as harm-reduction products aimed at reducing nicotine dependence and supporting quit attempts.

    The company will also update investors on its regulatory pathway with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, leadership team, and plans for an international rollout later in 2026 to generate early revenue and brand validation ahead of U.S. market entry. Cabbacis said proceeds from the offering are intended to support product development and commercialization, positioning the company ahead of a potential FDA rule to cap nicotine levels in cigarettes, while expanding into reduced-nicotine and alternative tobacco formats.

    Register for the webinar here.

  • China Scrutinizing Vape Industry

    China Scrutinizing Vape Industry

    China’s e-cigarette industry is entering a new round of regulatory tightening, with multiple draft policies recently opened for public consultation, according to China Business Network. Last week, the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration (STMA) released draft rules on credit management for e-cigarette manufacturers and wholesale enterprises, proposing a formal credit system that covers information collection, ratings, public disclosure, penalties for dishonesty, and credit restoration. Under the draft, companies would be graded A to D, with lower-rated firms facing stricter scrutiny on capacity expansion, investment approvals, and even licensing. This follows a STMA draft policy in December aimed at maintaining a dynamic balance between supply and demand, reinforcing total capacity control, and largely prohibiting new capacity additions except under tightly defined conditions.

    Together with earlier moves — including the solicitation of 2026 national e-cigarette standards and the State Council’s December call for tougher crackdowns on tobacco-related illegal activities — the measures signal a push toward more standardized, compliance-driven industry governance. Industry observers say the policies build on the regulatory framework established in 2021, when e-cigarettes were brought under tobacco-style supervision, and are intended to curb disorderly competition, raise compliance thresholds, and accelerate industry consolidation.