The Post

Government to legalise e-cigarettes

- STACEY KIRK

The Government has unveiled plans to make e-cigarettes legal, in a bid to claw back lost ground on the ambitious target to make New Zealand smokefree by 2025.

Associate Health Minister Nicky Wagner has announced the sale of nicotine e-cigarettes and e-liquid will be made legal and will likely come into force late next year.

‘‘Scientific evidence on the safety of e-cigarettes is still developing but there’s a general consensus that vaping is much less harmful than smoking,’’ she said.

‘‘This is an opportunit­y to see if restricted access to e-cigarettes and e-liquid can help lower our smoking rates, reduce harm and save lives.’’

E-cigarettes are electrical devices that mimic smoked tobacco products but produce a vapour (rather than smoke), which the users inhale (called ‘‘vaping’’). Liquid for the device can come with or without nicotine, in a variety of flavours.

Wagner said the government was taking a ‘‘cautious approach’’ by aligning the regulation­s around vaping with those for cigarettes.

‘‘This ensures cigarette smokers have access to a lowerrisk alternativ­e while we continue to discourage people from smoking or vaping in the first place.’’

New rules for all e-cigarettes, whether or not they contain nicotine, include:

Restrictin­g sales to those 18 years and over

Prohibitin­g vaping in indoor workplaces and other areas where smoking is banned under the Smoke-free Environmen­ts Act

Restrictin­g advertisin­g to limit the attraction of e-cigarettes to non-smokers, especially children and young people. Wagner said the Government is strongly committed to achieving the goal of a smokefree New Zealand by 2025.

The excise tax that applies to cigarettes would not be added on to e-cigarettes, and strict advertisin­g rules would limit the exposure of the products to young people.

All retailers will be allowed to display e-cigarettes and e-liquid at the point-of-sale, however retailers that restricted entry to people aged 18 and over could display the products instore and in window displays.

R18 stores were allowed to offer discounts, free samples, loyalty rewards and co-packaging.

Public advertisin­g on billboards, radio, TV and the internet would be prohibited.

While the sale has been and still is illegal, enforcemen­t of the law has been almost non-existent. Kiwis were buying the products online and importing directly for personal use, which was not illegal, but they could not be sold, on-sold or given to others in New Zealand.

New Zealand’s largest retailer of e-cigarettes, Cosmic, has welcomed the Government’s announceme­nt.

‘‘We’ve been retailing e-cigarettes for five years now and it is great to have positive clarity around the legislatio­n,’’ said owner Mark Carswell.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely, from a public safety perspectiv­e, not all products are created equal, which is why our buyers ensure all liquids and devices sold by Cosmic are of the highest standard.’’

Tobacco giant Philip Morris has also welcomed the move.

General manager Jason Erickson said: ‘‘It is clear that products that do not burn tobacco are significan­tly better than convention­al cigarettes.’’

A regulatory regime will also be establishe­d so the Ministry of Health can consider whether other emerging tobacco and nicotine-delivery products should be regulated as consumer products in future.

The ministry said there was ‘‘emerging evidence that e-cigarette use may substantia­lly reduce the burden of disease caused by smoking’’.

The sale of e-cigarettes would be restricted to people aged 18 years and over, would prevent e-cigarettes being advertised, and ban their use in smokefree areas, according to the proposals.

A starter pack of e-cigarettes can cost about $40, with the e-liquid about $10.

The cost of a pack of cigarettes has risen to more than $20 and heavy Government excise will see it rise to about $30 in the next four years.

"This is an opportunit­y to see if restricted access to e-cigarettes and e-liquid can help lower our smoking rates, reduce harm and save lives." Associate Health Minister Nicky Wagner

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