The Gold Coast Bulletin

Nicotine law is a blow

Business owners selling vapouriser­s fear ban will reduce their sales

- KIRSTIN PAYNE

A CHANGE to vaping laws in Australia may mean the end for at least a dozen small businesses on the Gold Coast say those in the industry.

A ban on importing nicotine products like those used in “vapouriser­s” or “e-cigarettes” was announced by the federal government earlier this week.

From 1 October 2021, only those with a prescripti­on from a doctor will be able to legally access nicotine e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine.

A vape is a battery-powered smoking device which contains a cartridge filled with a liquid that can contain nicotine, flavouring and other

chemicals. The liquid is heated into a vapour, which the person inhales.

Currently it is illegal to sell nicotine additives in the country but users regularly import

the product. Owner of Broadbeach’s Vape Haven, Octavian Voegele said the decision is a major hit.

“Nothing we sell in the shop currently has nicotine in it. We sell products like the vapes themselves and the flavoured liquid but our customers access their own nicotine products,” Mr Voegele said.

“This decision means they won’t be able to access the nicotine liquid, which will impact us. A lot of the time our customers are those who want to quit cigarettes and wean themselves off nicotine, we set people up to give them the optimal chance of quitting.”

Mr Voegele said he was sceptical about the role the pharmaceut­ical industry is now expected to play.

“Personally I believe the government is seeing less and less tax revenue as people quit cigarettes overtime so this is their way of making up the shortfall.” The Australian Medical Associatio­n ( AMA) and Australian Council on Smoking and Health (ACOSH) have both supported the decision claiming there is insufficie­nt evidence that nicotine-delivering e-cigarettes help people quit smoking, compared to other cessation aids.

Instead AMA President Dr Omar Khorshid argued there was strong evidence that they increase the risk of young people taking up smoking

“We don’t know yet what the long-term effects of inhaling heated liquids directly into the lungs are, and we don’t know what is in some of these vaping liquids,” Dr Khorshid said.

 ??  ?? Vape Haven owner Octavian Voegele and manager Alex Pitchagare worried about vape laws. Picture: Scott Powick
Vape Haven owner Octavian Voegele and manager Alex Pitchagare worried about vape laws. Picture: Scott Powick

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