Strict restrictions on vaping in Australia

September 10, 2021

Par: National Committee Against Smoking

Dernière mise à jour: September 10, 2021

Temps de lecture: 5 minutes

Restrictions drastiques sur le vapotage en Australie

At 1er From October 2021, it will become illegal to buy, possess or import e-cigarettes and e-liquids in Australia without a prescription, limiting vaping to supporting smoking cessation.

Australia is one of 32 countries to have followed the World Health Organization's (WHO) recommendation on e-cigarettes to ban them completely in recreational form.[1]. From the 1ster As of October 2021, the sale of vaping equipment and products is only permitted in Australia to smokers who wish to quit and who have a prescription. The possession and use of e-cigarettes is itself prohibited in all Australian states except South Australia.

During the process of adopting the law, in preparation since the end of 2019, the question of imports of e-cigarettes and e-liquids or refills remained unresolved; a significant loophole that would have allowed the regulations to be circumvented. An article published on the news website The Conversation describes the political journey of this additional measure and how it was adopted.[2].

A bill difficult to validate

In addition to the proposed ban on their sale and possession, the Minister of Health first presented a proposal to ban the import of e-cigarettes and e-liquids without a medical prescription at the end of the first half of 2020. This proposal included, among other things, parcel checks by customs officers. It was criticized by several parliamentarians, which had the effect of weakening the Federal Prime Minister's support for the comprehensive bill on e-cigarettes.

An impact assessment was then entrusted to the Office of Best Practice Regulation (OBPR), an organization affiliated with the Prime Minister's office and responsible for evaluating public policies. The opinions of this organization are made public and are only favorable to a minority of draft laws submitted to it. The OBPR, however, confirmed the options proposed by the Minister of Health's initial draft law and concluded that it was not feasible to leave loopholes in the initial ban on e-cigarettes; it therefore validated the ban on the importation of e-cigarettes and e-liquids to people without a prescription.[3].

Avoiding legislative loopholes

This legislative episode highlights the need to provide legislative and regulatory mechanisms that can prevent any kind of circumvention, as is often the case with tobacco and nicotine products. Every gap in the regulatory network is likely to be exploited by the tobacco industry. Filling these loopholes can sometimes require significant time and effort to complete the regulations and make them effective. It is also a source of risks that can weaken the initially adopted law. An example is provided in France with the adoption of the decree of November 2006 modifying the application of the smoking ban in all public and collective use places. This new decree replaced an initial regulation that failed to implement the smoking ban provided for in the Evin law.

By restricting the use of e-cigarettes to smokers who want to quit, Australia is deploying all available tools to limit young people's and minors' access to nicotine-containing products as much as possible, and to avoid repeating the vaping epidemic affecting young people in the United States.[4]. At the same time, in response to the tobacco industry's strategy to launch new tobacco and nicotine products, the Australian Therapeutics Goods Administration (TGA) decided in August 2020, even before their introduction on the local market, to ban the sale, possession and importation of heated tobacco devices. It also ruled out the possibility of selling or importing smokeless oral tobacco products, such as snus, tobacco pastes and powders, or chewing tobacco.

Keywords: e-cigarettes, Australia, import, regulation, new products.

©Generation Without Tobacco

MF


[1] World Health Organization, WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic, 2021, 212 p., consulted on September 8, 2021. [2] Senne S, From October, it will be all but impossible for most Australians to vape — largely because of Canberra's little-known 'homework police', The Conversation, published September 7, 2021, accessed September 8, 2021. [3] Office of Best Practice Regulation, Proposal to prevent the uptake of nicotine containing e-cigarettes by ever users (adolescents and young adults), to support smoking cessation and to reduce nicotine poisonings of children. Regulation Impact Statement for the Secretary of the Department of Health and his delegate including when acting under s52D(2) of the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989, Version 1.0, December 2020, 182 p., accessed September 8, 2021. [4] Tobacco Free Generation, One-third of American high school students have used e-cigarettes in 2019, published August 25, 2020, accessed September 8, 2021. National Committee Against Smoking |

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