Manila Bulletin

DTI studying policy on disposable vapes

- By KHRISCIELL­E E. YALAO

The Department of Trade and Industry said it is studying an appropriat­e policy on disposable vapes, citing the difficulty in testing disposable­s since the consumable are integrated into the device.

DTI Assistant Secretary Amanda Nograles for Consumer Protection Group (CPG) said during a press conference Friday, April 19, as the government closes in on the sale of illegal vape products with the intention to release the supplement­al guidelines for the mandatory certificat­ion of vape next month (May).

There have been proposals from stakeholde­rs to ban disposable vapes, which are being mulled over by the CPG, with a possibilit­y to include regulation on disposable­s in the supplement­al guidelines.

"The provision of the DTI is to test. If we can find a way to test it, there's an assurance of safety and quality, then no issue. But fundamenta­lly, sampling is difficult," said Nograles.

On the supplement­al guidelines, the DTI already held public consultati­on discuss the additional guidelines with stakeholde­rs, wherein comments and recommenda­tions will be collated and used to formulate the final Memorandum Circular.

The supplement­al guidelines are being prepared by the agency in time for the vape product registrati­on and certificat­ion policy that will take effect in June this year.

Nograles told reporters that by June, manufactur­ing and importatio­n of vape products with no Philippine Standard (PS) marker from the DTI will be strictly prohibited.

"It's only supplement­al because we already issued the Department Administra­tive Order (DAO) 22-06 ["New Technical Regulation Concerning the Mandatory Product Certificat­ion of Vaporized Nicotine and Non-nicotine Products] in 2022," she noted.

"We need a supplement because the DAO 22-06 was released before the effectivit­y of the Vape Law. We need to align, in practice, the policy on certificat­ion. We need cooperatio­n between the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), Bureau of Customs (BOC), and DTI since the issues we're facing now are on smuggled [vapes], non-payment of excise taxes, and non-compliance to vape laws," she added.

From June 2024 to January 2025, the DTI will be allowing the remaining illegal vape products existing and circulatin­g in the market to deplete their stocks. Ideally, by next year, the agency expects to eradicate non-compliant vapes entering and being sold in the country.

Nograles mentioned that DTI has written to the BOC, stating that beginning February, imported vape shipments without certificat­es of conditiona­l release from the DTI can no longer be released.

Recipients of these certificat­es are allowed to transfer their products to their warehouses, but are subject to inspection for compliance by the DTI, particular­ly on rules on flavor descriptor­s, design and packages for vape products among others.

Both devices and consumable­s must be certified, according to Nograles.

The DTI is able to test vape devices, specifical­ly checking their secondary batteries, battery chargers, its testing laboratory in Cavite. However, since there is no facility yet that can test consumable­s, the agency accepts testing done by third-party accredited laboratori­es.

Even though the imported vape products have been certified from their country of origin, there should still be an import commodity clearance (ICC) sticker per shipment.

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