Welsh Health Minister Mark Drakeford said the rapid
spread of e-cigarettes could undermine the health benefits of
banning the smoking of conventional cigarettes in public in 2007.
The proposal comes amid a fierce debate over the health impact of
e-cigarettes which do not contain tobacco or produce smoke but use
heat to vaporize flavored, liquid nicotine.
Proponents argue they can help people to quit smoking but a rising
number of countries like Singapore and Brazil have banned
e-cigarettes and U.S. cities including New York and Los Angeles,
blocked their use in many public places.
Drakeford said he was concerned that the use of e-cigarettes would
boost the number of smokers.
"E-cigarettes contain nicotine, which is highly addictive, and I
want to minimize the risk of a new generation becoming addicted to
this drug," Drakeford said in a statement as he launched a raft of
proposals to improve public health in Wales.
His proposals are open for consultation until June 24 and, if
backed, will then go to the Welsh Assembly, which has the powers to
run its own health and education services.
Battery-powered e-cigarettes were first introduced in China in 2004
and have since grown into a $2 billion industry.
Traditional tobacco companies, including British American Tobacco
and Imperial Tobacco, have entered the e-cigarette business to
offset declining cigarette sales.
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A spokesman for Fontem Ventures, the e-cigarette subsidiary of
Imperial Tobacco, called Wales' proposal "disproportionate". "There is no credible evidence that there are health benefits
from banning e-cigarettes from public places," he said.
Around 1.3 million people use e-cigarettes in Britain, most of whom
are current or former tobacco smokers according to the charity
Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).
Britain earlier this year banned the sale of e-cigarettes to anyone
aged under 18 with the changes going through parliament.
European and U.S. regulators have been debating policy for the
industry. The EU reached an agreement in December to allow
e-cigarettes to be sold as consumer products rather than more
tightly regulated medical devices.
(Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith; editing by Angus MacSwan)
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