Vaping Digest 24th June

Wednesday’s News at a glance:

Dutch extend smoking rules to cover e-cigarettes, plan to ban flavours ~ Vaping in Australia is About to Become a Whole Lot Tougher ~ Vapers will need a doctor’s prescription to import liquid nicotine under new proposal ~ MPs break ranks to defy government’s vaping ban ~ Support A Smoke-Free Australia (Petition!) ~ The great Australian nicotine airlift ~ Coalition MPs revolt against ban on people importing liquid nicotine for vaping ~ Will the July 1 vaping ban push people back to cigarettes? ~ Ban on importing e-cigarettes a ‘death sentence’ for vapers ~ First PMTA from an Indie Vape Manufacturer Submitted ~ E-Cigarettes are not the problem ~ Impact of EU Legislation ~ Reaction To The Oz Nic Ban ~ Australia Bans Nicotine ~ Vapers launch fighting fund to challenge Therapeutic Goods Administration’s ban on nicotine e-cigarettes ~ Australia announces major crackdown to effectively ban nicotine imports

Dutch extend smoking rules to cover e-cigarettes, plan to ban flavours

Robin Pascoe, Dutch News
The Dutch government is to extend current legislation on smoking to cover electronic cigarettes from July 1, and is also planning an outright ban on flavoured tobacco products for e-cigarettes. The measures, outlined in a briefing to parliament on Tuesday, are aimed at making smoking less attractive to youngsters.

Vaping in Australia is About to Become a Whole Lot Tougher

Sarah Basford, Gizmodo

Importing an e-cigarette or nicotine liquid refills will become near impossible if proposed laws by Australia’s health minister are passed. The Australian government intends to ask the Governor-General to amend customs regulations, making it illegal to import vaping equipment into the country without a medical prescription.

Vapers will need a doctor’s prescription to import liquid nicotine under new proposal

Malcolm Sutton, ABC Net AU

Vapers will no longer be able to import liquid nicotine for their devices without a doctor’s prescription, if a proposal by Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt is successful.

Mr Hunt has announced he wants to prohibit the importation of vaping devices, or e-cigarettes, containing liquid nicotine, as well as refills, from July 1 — unless the product is prescribed by a doctor and ordered by a medical supplier.

MPs break ranks to defy government’s vaping ban

Mark Levy, 2GB

A petition lead by two Queensland politicians has been circulated calling for the Federal Government to reverse plans to ban e-cigarette imports.

Health Minister Greg Hunt has announced he wants to prohibit the importation of vaping devices, or e-cigarettes, containing liquid nicotine from July 1.

Mark Levy said there was a “revolt against the vaping ban” happening, with Senator Matthew Canavan and Dawson MP George Christensen throwing their support behind the petition.

Editor note, petition:

Support A Smoke-Free Australia

Senator Matthew Canavan – LNP Senator for Queensland, George Christensen – LNP Member for Dawson

If you support vaping, please sign the petition. As Government MP’s with loud voices, we will ensure your message is heard.


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Coalition MPs revolt against ban on people importing liquid nicotine for vaping

Paul Karp, The Guardian

Coalition MPs including George Christensen have revolted against Greg Hunt’s unilateral decision to ban the personal importation of liquid nicotine for vaping from 1 July.

The decision, made by the health minister on Friday after parliament rose for a six-week adjournment, delighted doctors groups but has outraged Liberal and National backbenchers who favour legalisation of vaping.

Will the July 1 vaping ban push people back to cigarettes?

James Purtill, abc.net.au

Nicotine e-cigarettes and refills will be banned in Australia from July 1 under pain of a $220,000 fine. In the United Kingdom, they’re advertised and sold in hospital foyers. What’s going on?



Ban on importing e-cigarettes a ‘death sentence’ for vapers

Ben Fordham, 2GB

There is outrage over the government’s decision to ban the importation of e-cigarettes.

From July 1, the importation of e-cigarettes and nicotine-containing refills will be illegal.

Currently, the sale of e-cigarettes is banned in all states and territories, forcing many to result to importing them.

Individuals will need a doctor’s prescription to purchase e-cigarettes or refills.

University of NSW Associate Professor Dr Colin Mendelsohn told Ben Fordham many people will go back to cigarettes.

First PMTA from an Indie Vape Manufacturer Submitted

Jim McDonald, Vaping 360

E-Alternative Solutions (EAS) has submitted Premarket Tobacco Applications for its closed-system vape products to the FDA. The company is the first vaping manufacturer not owned by a major tobacco company to announce a PMTA submission. All of the big tobacco companies that sell vaping products in the U.S. have submitted applications, the most recent being Imperial Brands’ application for myblu.

E-Cigarettes are not the problem

Anthony Lamorena, RStreet

Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, Hawai’i lawmakers were working to address another public health issue that has plagued the state: the high rates of youth vaping amongst Hawai’i teens. Lawmakers have introduced bills that would ban flavored tobacco products, criminalize their usage and raise the purchasing age for all tobacco to 100 years old.


THREE from Dave Cross, Planet of The Vapes

Impact of EU Legislation

Research says vapers have been largely reassured by EU safety regulations, but some have been pushed to the black market for stronger hits. Researchers based at the University of East Anglia, London South Bank University, and the University of Leicester studied reactions to vaping legislation.

Reaction To The Oz Nic Ban

The Australian Tobacco Harm Reduction Association (ATHRA) says the “major crackdown” by the Government is an effective ban on nicotine imports and constitutes a “death sentence for hundreds of thousands of Australian vapers and smokers.” YouTube reviewer and all-round potty mouth Vaping Bogan used some more colourful language.

Australia Bans Nicotine

A joint announcement from the Department of Health (ODC) and Australian Border Force brings Minister for Health Greg ‘Drug War’ Hunt to the conclusion of his three-year attack on tobacco harm reduction – a ban on the sale and import of nicotine liquid. The move comes into force on July 1st, “to reduce the risk to public health through addiction to nicotine and nicotine poisoning”.




On this Day…2019

A look back at how things have moved on or otherwise…

GFN 2019 – A very civil society

Harry Shapiro

I am just winding down from the whirlwind of activity that is the Global Forum on Nicotine (GFN) conference held in Warsaw earlier this month. It is a gathering of people from all occupations and disciplines; lawyers, doctors, scientists, economists, consumers, public health officials, nurses and industry to name but a few. Over 600 people from 70 countries, but with one thought in mind: to try and mitigate the worst effects of the global smoking epidemic, through the mechanism of tobacco harm reduction (THR) and within that, an emphasis on the use of safer nicotine products for those who for whatever reason cannot or don’t want to give up nicotine.

10 Things I Learned . . 

From the Global Forum on Nicotine 2019 – Lee Johnson

The Global Forum on Nicotine (the GFN, for short) has been one of the major events in the tobacco harm reduction calendar for six years now. Each event sees researchers, policy experts, stop smoking workers, consumers and anybody else with an interest in THR gather to listen to presentations on topics such as vaping, smokeless tobacco and heat-not-burn use, taking place over several days and generally providing enough information to single-handedly bring you up-to-date with the best evidence and latest goings-on in the field.


 

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