Age to buy cigarettes in England should rise every year, review says
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[June 09, 2022]
By Farouq Suleiman
LONDON (Reuters) -The legal age of sale for
cigarettes in England should be raised by one year every year until
eventually no one can buy tobacco products, a government-commissioned
review recommended on Thursday.
Progressively increasing the minimum age from 18 was one of 15
interventions recommended in the review ordered by health minister Sajid
Javid to help meet a target to be 'smokefree' by 2030. Smokefree is
defined as 5% smoking prevalence or less in England.
Other interventions included the promotion of vapes as a "swap to stop"
tool to help people quit smoking, and a tobacco licence for retailers to
limit availability.
The government said it would consider the recommendations and publish
its own plan in due course.
There are an estimated 6 million smokers in England and the minimum age
for the legal purchase of tobacco in England, Scotland and Wales was
last raised in 2007 from 16 to 18 years.
Last year, New Zealand announced plans to ban future generations from
ever purchasing cigarettes with people aged 14 and under in 2027 not
being allowed to buy cigarettes in the country in their lifetime.
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A person smokes a cigarette in Canary Wharf in London, Britain May
10, 2017. REUTERS/Marika Kochiashvili
The head of the review Javed Khan,
former CEO of children's charity Barnardo's, warned the British
government was on track to miss its targets.
"Without immediate and sustained action, England will miss the
smokefree target by many years and most likely decades," he said.
Jefferies analysts published a note ahead of the
announcement saying that if aggressive control measure were
implemented, it would create greater risks for tobacco companies
more focused on 'combustible' tobacco products, naming Imperial
Brands and Japan Tobacco
Conversely Jefferies said it could create opportunities for those
like British American Tobacco and Philip Morris, which it said had
more reliance on sales from reduced risk products, such as vapes.
(Reporting by William James and Farouq Suleiman, editing by Alistair
Smout and Toby Chopra)
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