Vapers Digest 29th May

Friday’s News at a glance:
Lord Demands Scottish Vape Bans ~ FDA Approves Fruit Flavours ~ Journal Entry – The Fear of Being Silenced ~ World Vapers’ Alliance ~ Reach Out, Don’t Shun: What World No Tobacco Day Used to Mean ~ World No Tobacco Day: How Vaping Saved Millions of Lives—Including Mine ~ OPINION: World No Tobacco Day — Let’s talk about what’s actually happening at the counter ~ While the WHO Spreads Misinformation, Consumers Fight Back ~ World Vape Day and World No Tobacco Day: Putting People Back at the Centre of Public Health ~ A New Symbol, Renewed Hope for World Vape Day ~ Cancer and non-cancer risk analysis of vaping. Part I ~ It’s time for a new approach to quit smoking, once and for all ~ Australian Border Force seize 20 million illegal vapes since January 2024 as crackdown continues ~ Youth Vaping at Historic Lows: Why Vaping Is Canada’s Path to a Smoke-Free Future ~ The TVPA legislative review report is another government fail ~ Illinois’ Latest Flavor Ban Proposal Ignores Falling Youth Vaping and Smoking Rates ~ Institutional Narcissism: The Moral Goalpost Movers in Public Health ~ Michael Bloomberg Is Back at His Nanny Game ~ Sweden blasts France’s ‘absurd’ pouch ban ~ Warning to UK Pouch Users Travelling to France: Congratulations, You’re Apparently an International Drug Trafficker Now ~ We Are Innovation Poll Highlights How Quitting Helps Smokers and Loved Ones ~ France Is Banning Zyn and Threatening To Jail People for 5 Years ~ Special Report | Russian Vape Compromise Faces First Hurdles ~ Product|PMI Expands High-Strength Nicotine Pouch Portfolio With Zyn 16.5mg ~ EU tobacco ranking rewards prohibition failures and punishes smoke-free success ~ US FDA – Tobacco: News ~ Let’s talk e-cigarettes, May 2026
Two From Dave Cross, Planet Of The Vapes
Lord Demands Scottish Vape Bans
The Rt Hon Lord McConnell of Glenscorrodale has praised Scotland’s transformational impact on public health by getting tough on tobacco, and is now demanding that the nation adopts a similar approach for vapes. VPZ | The Vaping Specialist tells Planet of the Vapes that vaping and smoking are not the same and should not be regulated as though they are.
FDA Approves Fruit Flavours
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has expanded market access by finally authorising flavoured vape products. The authorising applies to the marketing of four Glas “electronic nicotine delivery systems” – or ecigs, as normal people call them. The World Vapers’ Alliance welcomed the FDA’s decision, saying that the evidence supporting the use of vape flavours has been clear for years.
Journal Entry – The Fear of Being Silenced
Alan Gor
Today I felt something I never expected to feel over a social media account: genuine fear and despair.
When I saw that my X account had been suspended, it felt like the floor had disappeared beneath me. At first, there was confusion. I kept refreshing the screen, hoping it was some kind of glitch, hoping it would suddenly fix itself. But when it didn’t, that confusion quickly turned into panic.
World Vapers’ Alliance
Liza Katsiashvili, Sunday World
While World No Tobacco Day is celebrated on 31 May, millions of vapers and former smokers around the world celebrate World Vape Day on 30 May. So what is it all about?
The fight against tobacco consumption is growing in two very divided directions. The first side is made up of consumers – people who naturally shift to less harmful products like vaping or nicotine pouches when they want to quit smoking. The second side is made up of governments and health authorities that often deny or downplay the benefits that less harmful alternatives can bring.
Reach Out, Don’t Shun: What World No Tobacco Day Used to Mean
Derek Yach
The first World No-Smoking Day fell on 7 April 1988, timed to the WHO’s 40th anniversary. South Africa wasn’t a WHO member then—apartheid had seen to that. Yet we marked the moment anyway, launching a special edition of the South African Medical Journal on smoking in South Africa. It was our way of saying: the science doesn’t recognize political quarantine, and neither should the smokers who needed help.
From that first day through the decade I spent working on these campaigns at WHO, one purpose stood above all others: reach out to people who smoke, help them quit, and rally the family and friends who could support them.
World No Tobacco Day: How Vaping Saved Millions of Lives—Including Mine
Cameron English, American Council on Science and Health (ACSH)
For the first time in my adult life, I’m nicotine free. Here’s my story, and the science that explains how I got here. Happy World No Tobacco Day.
My tobacco addiction grabbed hold of me quietly and quickly—and I loved every minute of it. At first, smoking was an occasional pleasure I enjoyed on the weekends when I drank with my friends. I used to give away my leftover cigarettes when the festivities ended, but that didn’t last long as the cravings took root. Pretty soon I was smoking every weekend, several times a week and eventually daily — a pack of Camel Lights.
OPINION: World No Tobacco Day — Let’s talk about what’s
actually happening at the counter
Kenny Shim, Toronto Sun
When I first got into the convenience store industry as a clerk in the 1970s, more than four out of 10 Canadians smoked. Today it’s closer to one in 10. That’s a good thing.
I’m a former smoker myself. I quit more than a decade ago, and I know firsthand how difficult it can be. So, when World No Tobacco Day arrives each May 31, I take it personally.There is a persistent myth that convenience stores somehow profit from addiction and want customers to keep smoking. The reality behind the counter is far more human than the caricature suggests.
While the WHO Spreads Misinformation, Consumers Fight Back
Michael Landl, Brussels Report
Every year on 31 May, the WHO marks World No Tobacco Day. This year, the campaign targets nicotine and tobacco as a single problem and calls for tighter restrictions on vapes and nicotine pouches. One day earlier, on 30 May, the world marks World Vape Day. The timing is deliberate. So is the disagreement.
The WHO has been running this playbook for years. Every World No Tobacco Day, the same message: nicotine is the enemy, alternatives are industry tricks, and anyone who disagrees is in the pocket of Big Tobacco.
World Vape Day and World No Tobacco Day: Putting
People Back at the Centre of Public Health
Suely Castro, Quit Like Sweden
At the end of May, two important dates for global public health are observed within just 24 hours of each other. On 30 May, people around the world mark World Vape Day. On 31 May, World No Tobacco Day reminds us of the devastating toll caused by smoking related diseases.
These dates should not be seen as contradictory. They should be understood together, because both ultimately concern the same objective: reducing the enormous human suffering caused by smoking.
Skip Murray, Skip’s Corner – Let’s Talk!
In 2012, people in 15 countries observed the first World Vaping Day. Every year since, it has been a celebration for people who have found a way to stop smoking by switching to a safer alternative. This year, on the 15th World Vape Day, the tobacco harm reduction (THR) movement has something it has never had before: a universal symbol of its own.
The symbol did not come from a corporation, government agency, public health organization, or marketing firm trying to define us from the outside. It came from us, the people who use nicotine.
Cancer and non-cancer risk analysis of vaping. Part I
Roberto Sussman
Motivation: understanding risk models in vaping
It caught my attention a recently published article:
- Zhao, S., Zhang, X., Wang, J. et al. Carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic health risk assessment of organic compounds and heavy metals in electronic cigarettes. Sci Rep 13, 16046 (2023) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43112-y
presenting an analysis of cancer and non-cancer risks in vaping (aerosol inhalation and ingestion/dermal exposure from e-liquids). The article was written by academics of medical institutions of China. As we have seen in most of the literature on vaping, the authors’ repeat the usual hostile narrative towards vaping. It was specially annoying to read how the authors refer to vaping as “e-cigarette smoking” and vapers as “smokers”. More than a bad nomenclature, this is a veiled attempt to play down the differences between vaping and smoking.
It’s time for a new approach to quit smoking, once and for all
Dr Carolyn Beaumont, Medical Republic
The saying “where there’s smoke there’s fire” was never meant to be taken literally.
But this linguistic nuance is lost on competing criminal forces, with escalating fire-bombings of tobacconists in their quest to dominate Australia’s illicit tobacco market.
It has spread beyond tobacconists. Other businesses owned by rival criminals are being targeted – ice-cream shops in seaside towns, coffee shops, nail salons.
The tentacles of organised crime don’t stop there – a shipping container of illicit tobacco here, a return journey linked to human trafficking, weapons and drugs there. Like water flowing around rocks, intricate financial and supplier networks swiftly adapt to whatever enforcement and penalties they encounter.
Australian Border Force seize 20 million illegal vapes
since January 2024 as crackdown continues
Rachel Carbonell, Caitlyn Gribbin, ABC News AU
More than 20 million illegal vapes, with a street value of just over $1 billion, have been seized by law enforcement authorities since Australia’s vaping reforms came into effect.
Figures obtained exclusively by the ABC show 19.4 million vaping products, with an estimated street value of $974 million, were seized by Australian Border Force (ABF) since January 2024, when the vape importation ban began.
Youth Vaping at Historic Lows: Why Vaping Is Canada’s Path to a Smoke-Free Future
The Canadian Vaping Association, Global Newswire
This Saturday, May 30th, we celebrate World Vape Day 2026 and the 80 million adults around the world who made a life-changing decision by transitioning from combustible cigarettes to vaping. These individuals have stepped away from a product that claims more than 8 million lives annually through tobacco-related illness. That is not a small thing. That is a public health movement.
Here in Canada, more than 1.9 million adults are vaping and smoking rates continue to fall. Now is the moment to support the policies and conditions that can carry Canada across the finish line to a truly smoke-free future.
The TVPA legislative review report is another government fail
Sabine Benoit, Consumer Choice Center
The third legislative review of Canada’s Tobacco and Vaping Products Act largely overlooks consumer harm reduction arguments, despite submissions from advocacy groups like the Consumer Choice Center. While the government emphasizes declining smoking and youth vaping rates, critics argue that current restrictions still limit adult smokers’ access to less harmful alternatives. The review highlights ongoing tension between stricter regulation, enforcement priorities, and calls for broader access to regulated harm reduction tools.
Lindsey Stroud, Tobacco Harm Reduction 101
Legislation in the Prairie State would limit adult access to tobacco harm reduction products. Senate Bill 3148 would establish the “Flavored Tobacco Ban Act” and prohibit the sale of flavored tobacco products, including combustible cigarettes and smoke-free alternatives.
Under the proposed legislation, distributors and retailers would be prohibited from selling or offering flavored tobacco products for sale. Specifically prohibited flavors include fruit, chocolate, vanilla, honey, mint, menthol, and others.
The legislation defines tobacco products broadly to include products containing tobacco that can be chewed, dissolved, heated, inhaled, or smoked, covering cigars, cigarettes, and smokeless tobacco. Electronic cigarettes are defined to include all components and parts needed for an electronic nicotine delivery system.
Institutional Narcissism: The Moral Goalpost Movers in Public Health
Kevin Crowley
I posted the above AI-generated picture on my “official page” on Facebook, with the caption “Morals are standards set by those who want their standards met by others. #psychoticnannystate.”
I’ve used that quote for years, but paired it with this photo simply because I didn’t feel like brainstorming a better caption.
I had no grand plan or hidden motive. I just wanted to highlight the obvious narrative the public has been fed and the blind desire some people have to control others with it. It wasn’t meant to be a social experiment, but it accidentally became one… and it proved the point far better than I expected.
Michael Bloomberg Is Back at His Nanny Game
Steven Greenhut, The American Spectator
We haven’t heard much lately from Michael Bloomberg, the one-time New York City mayor, founder of the Bloomberg News organization, and head of his own philanthropy. His disappearance from the limelight probably is a relief given that, during his 12 years in the mayor’s office, he gained a much-deserved reputation as the Big Apple’s nanny-in-chief. I’m not defending many of his unhealthy targets, but his willingness to use the government to try to improve our own personal eating and drinking habits was, however well-intentioned, inappropriately prohibitionist.
Sweden blasts France’s ‘absurd’ pouch ban
Tim Hong, Clearing The Air
Sweden has hit out at France’s sweeping ban on nicotine pouches, after it emerged Swedes could face criminal penalties for carrying a smoke-free product that is legal at home while cigarettes remain on sale.
The row has opened a fresh divide in Europe’s approach to nicotine, with Stockholm accusing Paris of going too far by banning not just the sale of pouches, but their import, possession and use.
Under the French rules, a Swedish visitor carrying nicotine pouches legally bought at home could face penalties of up to five years in prison and a €375,000 fine.
Swedish trade minister Benjamin Dousa said the policy amounted to “an attack on the Swedish way of living”.
Two From The Daily Pouch
Warning to UK Pouch Users Travelling to France: Congratulations,
You’re Apparently an International Drug Trafficker Now
Mark Oates
There are many things British tourists should worry about when travelling to France. Being laughed at for attempting GCSE-level French. Accidentally ordering raw steak. Paris taxi drivers. The existential despair of paying €9 for a small beer near the Eiffel Tower.
What perhaps wasn’t on many nicotine pouch users’ bingo cards was the possibility of being treated like Pablo Escobar for carrying a tin of mint pouches in their backpack.
Yet here we are.
We Are Innovation Poll Highlights How Quitting Helps Smokers and Loved Ones
Joseph Hart
We Are Innovation consistently puts out interesting data and thought-leadership on smoking-alternative products. Yesterday, they released a new report titled, The Household Case for Innovation: A Five-Country Survey on Smoking Cessation, and Quality of Life.
What’s novel about this report is that WAI and Ipsos sought the opinions of the friends and family of those who quit smoking, rather than just polling the smokers themselves.
France Is Banning Zyn and Threatening To Jail People for 5 Years
Reem Ibrahim, Reason
If you’re planning on packing Zyn for your European summer vacation, you might want to reconsider.
On Sunday, the New York Post reported that France had banned “a number of popular nicotine-based products including Zyn pouches.” Those caught violating the measure could face up to five years in prison and a fine of $436,600.
While other European countries have moved against nicotine pouches, France is the only Western country to criminalize their use.
Two From 2Firsts
Special Report | Russian Vape Compromise Faces First Hurdles
A Russian initiative allowing regional authorities to ban vape sales — initially seen as a compromise alternative to a nationwide prohibition debated for months in Moscow — is already encountering early challenges. Several regions have rushed to introduce restrictions even before the legislation has completed its passage through parliament, prompting pushback from businesses warning that the approach could still destabilise the legal market and create uneven regulatory conditions across the country.
Product|PMI Expands High-Strength Nicotine Pouch Portfolio With Zyn 16.5mg
According to UK retail industry outlet Better Retailing, Philip Morris International (PMI) has launched Zyn Menthol Ice 16.5mg nicotine pouches in the UK.
The report said the product is the highest-strength nicotine pouch currently available in the Zyn portfolio.
According to the article, Menthol Ice 16.5mg features eucalyptus and menthol flavors. It is now available through PMI Open and will begin rolling out to wholesale channels across the UK from the end of May.
EU tobacco ranking rewards prohibition failures and punishes smoke-free success
Smoke Free Sweden
Europe’s new official tobacco control rankings are “a celebration of failure” that risk entrenching the consumption of deadly cigarettes, according to international health experts.
The report, compiled by the EU-funded Smoke Free Partnership (SFP), rewards countries with strict prohibitions but sky-high smoking rates, while punishing those that are wiping out cigarettes by giving adults access to safer alternatives, such as vapes and nicotine pouches.
Dr Delon Human, leader of Smoke Free Sweden, expressed concern that the rankings focus on process rather than actual health outcomes.
US FDA – Tobacco: News
Tobacco Insider
British American Tobacco (BAT) subsidiary Reynolds American and Altria Group are objecting to the FDA’s proposed framework for reviewing flavored vaping products, arguing the agency’s standards remain too vague and restrictive despite recent policy shifts.
The FDA’s draft guidance indicates it still considers fruit- and candy-flavored products particularly risky due to youth appeal, making authorization unlikely for most such products. However, the agency signaled it may be more open to flavors such as coffee, tea, and spices that it believes are primarily attractive to adults.
Let’s talk e-cigarettes, May 2026
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, Nicola Lindson, University of Oxford
Associate Professor Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Associate Professor Nicola Lindson discuss the new evidence in e-cigarette research and interview Dr Jonathan Livingstone-Banks lecturer & senior researcher in evidence-based healthcare in the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford. Dr Livingstone-Banks is part of the Tobacco Addiction Group within the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine. He carries out research in the field of tobacco control and evidence synthesis and is involved in many Cochrane Reviews on tobacco control topics. Dr Livingstone-Banks is also a philosopher interested in the philosophy of evidence-based healthcare.
On this day…2015!
A look back at how things have moved on or otherwise…
How the EU TPD Will Change Vaping
And What You Can Do About It…
Guess which country has the lowest rate of lung cancer in Western Europe? Sweden. And the reason is simple. Snus is an oral tobacco which has become popular as an alternative to cigarettes in Sweden. In fact, Sweden now has the lowest rate of smoking in Europe, and the highest usage of smokless tobacco….
MP condemns e-cigarette office ban
A Conservative MP has criticised a new rule which prevents members inhaling e-cigarettes inside their private offices at Westminster. Mark Pawsey, the MP for Rugby, said the ruling – by the House of Commons Commission – meant those wishing to vape had to do so in designated areas outdoors where they are exposed to second-hand tobacco smoke….
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