Belgium will ban sales of disposable e-cigarettes in a first for the EU
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[December 30, 2024]
By SYLVAIN PLAZY and MARK CARLSON
BRUSSELS (AP) — Belgium will ban the sale of disposable electronic
cigarettes as of Jan. 1 on health and environmental grounds in a
groundbreaking move for European Union nations.
Health minister Frank Vandenbroucke said the inexpensive e-cigarettes
had turned into a health threat since they are an easy way for teenagers
to be drawn into smoking and get hooked on nicotine.
“Disposable e-cigarettes is a new product simply designed to attract new
consumers,” he said in an interview.
“E-cigarettes often contain nicotine. Nicotine makes you addicted to
nicotine. Nicotine is bad for your health. These are fact,”
Vandenbroucke added.
Because they are disposable, the plastic, battery and circuits are a
burden on the environment. On top of that, “they create hazardous waste
chemicals still present in what people throw away,” Vandenbroucke said.
The health minister said he also targeted the disposable e-cigarettes
because reusable ones could be a tool to help people quit smoking if
they cannot find another way.
Australia outlawed the sale of “ vapes” outside pharmacies earlier this
year in some of the world’s toughest restrictions on electronic
cigarettes. Now Belgium is leading the EU drive.
“We are the first country in Europe to do so,” Vandenbroucke said.
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Flavored varieties of disposable electronic cigarette devices are on
display in a shop in Brussels on Dec. 12, 2024, ahead of Belgium's
ban on the sale of disposable vapes as of Jan. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Geert
Vanden Wijngaert)
He wants tougher tobacco measures in
the 27-nation bloc.
“We are really calling on the European Commission to come forward
now with new initiatives to update, to modernize, the tobacco
legislation,” he said.
There is understanding about Belgium's decision, even in some shops
selling electronic cigarettes, and especially on the environmental
issue.
Once the cigarette is empty, “the battery is still working. That’s
what is terrible, is that you could recharge it, but you have no way
of recharging it,” said Steven Pomeranc, owner of the Brussels
Vapotheque shop. "So you can imagine the level of pollution it
creates.”
A ban usually means a financial loss to the industry, but Pomeranc
said he thinks it will not hurt too much.
“We have a lot of alternative solutions which are also very easy to
use," he said. "Like this pod system, which are pre-filled with
liquid, which can just be clipped into the rechargeable e-cigarette.
So we will simply have a shift of clients towards this new system.”
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Associated Press writer Raf Casert in Brussels contributed.
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