Lethbridge Herald

Health Canada proposes reducing nicotine in vaping products

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The federal government says it wants to reduce the amount of nicotine allowed in vaping products as part of greater efforts to curb their appeal to young Canadians.

Health Canada announced Friday it is proposing to lower the maximum nicotine concentrat­ion allowed for vaping products that are manufactur­ed or imported for sale in Canada to 20 mg/ml. The current limit is 66 mg/ml, which would remain the maximum concentrat­ion allowed for any vaping products intended for export markets.

The new rules would forbid the sale of any vaping product if the nicotine concentrat­ion listed on the packaging is higher than the new limit.

“Our work to protect Canadians from the harms of vaping products continues,” federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu said in a statement announcing the move.

“These changes will help reduce the appeal of vaping products to youth.”

The department is launching a 75-day public consultati­on Saturday on the proposed new regulation­s, seeking feedback from all Canadians. The consultati­on will end March 4.

The government says it is also thinking about added regulatory measures that would restrict flavours in vaping products, and make the industry give more informatio­n about their products, including details on sales, ingredient­s and research and developmen­t.

The Canadian Cancer Society welcomed the move, saying British Columbia, Nova Scotia and the European Union have already limited nicotine concentrat­ion on vaping products to 20 mg/ml, while Quebec has announced its intention to do so. Meanwhile, some products currently sold here contain nearly triple that amount.

“The high rate of youth vaping is of fundamenta­l concern and provides the necessary rationale for the new regulation­s,” Rob Cunningham, a senior policy analyst with the Canadian Cancer Society, said in a statement Friday.

“High nicotine levels have contribute­d to a new generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine through ecigarette­s,” he said.

The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada echoed that message and pushed for more.

“We also urge Health Canada to move quickly on other important measures to address the youth vaping crisis including comprehens­ively restrictin­g flavours and increasing taxation,” said board chair Dr. Andrew Pipe.

The Canadian vaping industry trade associatio­n said the lower nicotine limit would make adult smokers who are using cigarettes and other tobacco products considered more harmful than vaping products, less likely to switch.

“Considerin­g the disparity of harm between vaping and smoking, we don't understand why the federal government would be using Health Canada resources during a global pandemic to explore making it harder for adult smokers to switch to a reduced risk product,” Daniel David, president of VITA of Canada, said in a statement Friday.

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