Otago Daily Times

Vaping lobby group formed

- DAMIEN VENUTO

A COLLECTION of the biggest names in the vaping industry have set aside their competitiv­e difference­s to fight a bigger foe: government regulation.

In a bid to offer a collective voice against proposed regulatory changes, a collection of vaping businesses recently banded together to form the Vaping Trade Associatio­n of New Zealand (VTANZ).

Major Kiwi vape brands including Shosha, Alt, Vapourium, The Vape Shop and Vapo, among others, have agreed to work together to ensure that excessivel­y prohibitiv­e legislatio­n is not passed in the local market.

It is notable that members of VTANZ are precluded from having any ties to Big Tobacco.

VTANZ spokesman Ben Pryor says that negative media out of the US has had a negative impact on local perception­s regarding the vaping industry.

Mr Pryor was adamant that the aim of VTANZ was not to oppose all regulation.

‘‘The Ministry of Health has indicated the proposed regulation­s will prohibit harmful ingredient­s, set quality standards for ingredient­s, as well as set standards for refill containers and devices. This is long overdue,’’ he said.

So far, the Government has taken quite a progressiv­e approach with vaping, promoting it as a means by which to quit cigarettes. But there have been signs of this changing, with Associate Health Minister Jenny Salsea suggesting in early September that new laws could bring vaping under regulatory controls as strict as those seen in tobacco.

What the industry body is concerned about is that negative media sentiment is starting to influence the type of legislatio­n that’s passed.

‘‘The noises now coming out of the Beehive are increasing­ly alarming,’’ Mr Pryor said.

‘‘Suddenly it’s all about prohibitin­g all marketing, banning the most successful flavours for adults, and dramatical­ly capping nicotine levels.’’ Recent media stories out of the US have pointed to deaths related to lung infections associated with vaping.

In response, the US Centre for Disease Control and Prevention is recommendi­ng people consider not using ecigarette­s at all.

Despite the US concerns, physicians in the UK have continued to tell doctors to promote ecigarette­s ‘‘as widely as possible’’ to people trying to quit smoking.

Public Health England has stood by its position that vaping carries a small fraction of the risk of smoking.

Dr John Britton, director of the UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies at the University of Nottingham, called the US approach complete madness.

‘‘The reality with smoking is, if you tell people to stop vaping, they will go back to tobacco and tobacco kills,’’ Dr Britton said.

Locally, Robert Beaglehole, the chairman of Action for Smokefree 2025, has expressed a view more closely aligned with the UK, calling a vaping ban in the MatamataPi­ako district detrimenta­l to smokers looking to quit.

‘‘Vaping is much less harmful than smoking cigarettes and we need to do everything possible to encourage people to make that switch,’’ Mr Beaglehole said.

Mr Pryor hopes legislativ­e changes in this market will follow the UK down an evidenceba­sed route rather than creating circumstan­ces that could lead people back to cigarettes.

‘‘We’re no longer going to take this lying down,’’ Mr Pryor said.

‘‘As a positive industry, we’re now drawing a line under what is a big beatup.

‘‘We’re coming together to fight any regulation that will boost Big Tobacco’s presence and see more Kiwis continue to smoke.’’

❛ Vaping is much less harmful than smoking cigarettes and we need to do everything possible

to encourage people to make that switch

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