The move comes as Juul and other e-cigarette makers have faced
heightened scrutiny from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration amid
a sharp increase by high school students in use of the devices,
which look like a USB flash drive and vaporize a flavored liquid
containing nicotine.
In a statement on Tuesday, Juul Chief Executive Kevin Burns said the
company wants to be "the off-ramp for adult smokers to switch from
cigarettes, not an on-ramp for America’s youth to initiate on
nicotine."
Juul said it will stop selling flavors except for tobacco, mint and
menthol in all retail outlets, including convenience stores and vape
shops, until retailers can install technology that scans buyers' IDs
to independently verify they are aged 21 or older.
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Until then, popular fruit flavors and other sweet flavors that
appeal to younger users will only be available on Juul's website.
The company said it uses an age-verification system that requires
buyers to enter their social security number, address and birth
date, which is verified by a third-party service.
In addition, the company said it is shutting down its social media
channels on Instagram and Facebook, and working with social media
companies to remove "unauthorized, youth-oriented content on their
platforms" relating to Juul.
FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said on Twitter that "voluntary
action is no substitute for regulatory steps FDA will soon take,"
but he acknowledged Juul's actions and urged other e-cigarette
makers to take steps to reduce use by minors.
"JUUL ROOMS"
Some of Juul's early social media and Youtube videos included images
of attractive young people using the product. User-generated social
media about Juul became popular over the last two years, with young
people posting videos and photos of themselves using the product at
school or with friends, often under the hashtags #doit4juul or #juullife.
"Juuling" has become synonymous with vaping in high schools across
the country, where some teachers and administrators have started
locking bathrooms, jokingly called "Juul rooms" by students.
The FDA in September threatened to ban Juul and four other leading
e-cigarette products unless their makers took steps to prevent use
by minors. The FDA gave Juul and four big tobacco companies 60 days
to submit plans to curb underage use, a compliance period that has
now ended.
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The agency is expected to announce restrictions on flavored
e-cigarette products this week that mirror those suggested by Juul
and other manufacturers. A senior agency official last week said the
FDA plans to only allow sales of tobacco, mint and menthol flavors
in convenience stores and gas stations. Other flavors could still be
sold at vape shops.
Juul said that beginning in early 2017 it required models used in
advertisements of its products be older than 35. Earlier this year,
it began featuring only former cigarette smokers in its ads to
highlight smoking cessation benefits.
Juul has grabbed significant U.S. market share over the last year,
growing from 13.6 percent of the market in early 2017 to nearly 75
percent now, according to a Wells Fargo analysis of Nielsen retail
data.
Marlboro maker Altria Group Inc, which sells e-cigarettes under the
MarkTen brand, last month said it would stop selling its pod-based
electronic cigarettes, generally smaller devices that use pre-filled
nicotine liquid cartridges, in response to FDA’s concerns. The
company also said it would restrict flavors for its other
e-cigarette products to tobacco, menthol and mint.
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James Campbell, a spokesman for the Imperial Brands Plc unit that
makes blu e-cigarettes, said the company told the FDA it plans to
introduce a technology early next year that would lock devices in an
effort to prevent underage use. The company also said it would
review its flavors and packaging to minimize youth appeal,
strengthen age verification for online sales and terminate contracts
with retailers found to sell to minors.
Michael Shannon, a spokesman for R.J. Reynolds Vapor, a unit of
British American Tobacco, said last week the company planned to tell
the FDA it would penalize retailers that sell to youth and
strengthen online sales restrictions to prevent underage or large
bulk purchases of its products.
(Reporting by Chris Kirkham; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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