Australia begins crackdown on vaping, to ban import of single-use
devices
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[November 28, 2023]
By Lewis Jackson
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia will ban imports of disposable vapes in
January, the Health Minister said on Tuesday, the first step in a
crackdown aimed at curbing the growing popularity of these
nicotine-filled devices with young people.
The ban will be expanded in March to include all non-therapeutic vapes,
including refillable devices, while importers of vapes for medical
purposes will need permit from the Office of Drug control, Health
Minister Mark Butler said in a statement.
The legislative package will also include a total A$75 million in extra
funding for the Australian Border Force and the Therapeutic Goods
Administration to enforce the new rules.
Additional legislation next year will apply the same prohibitions to
domestic manufacturers.
"These are the vapes that have pink unicorns on them, bubblegum
flavoring, disguised in order for them to hide them in their pencil
cases," Butler told a news conference.
"This is not a therapeutic good to help hardened smokers kick the habit.
This is a good that is deliberately targeted at kids to recruit them to
nicotine addiction."
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Vape pens are pictured on a counter at a vape store, in Melbourne,
Australia, May 2, 2023. REUTERS/Sandra Sanders/File Photo
Despite one of the lowest rates of
smoking in the OECD, a group of mostly rich countries, vaping in
Australia is growing rapidly, especially among the young. Around
one-in-five people aged 18 to 24 vape, according to government data.
First flagged in August, the reforms aim to curb
the device's popularity in response to research showing the
potential for long-term harm.
To ensure the bans don't limit access for smokers looking to quit,
doctors and nurses will be given expanded powers in January to
prescribe therapeutic vapes where clinically appropriate.
But therapeutic vapes will be restricted from using flavors, have
limited nicotine levels and be sold in pharmaceutical packaging
under new rules to be introduced next year, with a transition period
for manufacturers to comply.
(Reporting by Lewis Jackson; editing by Miral Fahmy)
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