The Mercury News

Juul restricts sales of flavored nicotine

Company shuts down its Facebook, Instagram accounts

- By Olivia Zaleski

Juul Labs, the maker of the e-cigarette that is wildly popular with American teens, said it stopped selling its fruit-flavored nicotine pods to stores and shut down its U.S.-based Facebook and Instagram accounts.

The move, which was announced Tuesday by Juul Chief Executive Officer Kevin Burns, follows a campaign from the Food and Drug Administra­tion to curtail underage use of ecigarette­s. On Thursday, an FDA senior official said the agency would restrict sales of many fruity flavored nicotine cartridges used in vaping devices.

The curb is expected to cut Juul’s in-store retail sales by 45 percent, according to a person familiar with the company’s sales projection­s. Juul said it will no longer take orders from retailers. However, stores may continue to sell their remaining stock.

Juul will still sell the pods through its website to ageverifie­d consumers, who

are required to enter their birth date, address and the last four digits of their Social Security number. Juul says the informatio­n is checked against public records.

Juul will also lose more than 77,000 followers on Instagram and almost 11,000 followers on Facebook. Tobacco- and menthol-flavored Juuls will still be available in retail stores. The flavors mirror

what is currently available for combustibl­e cigarettes.

Juul says the company was created to help adult smokers quit. Users suck on a sleek pen-like device to deliver a powerful hit of vaporized nicotine. The company’s discrete design and high nicotine content have made Juul the top-selling e-cigarette in the U.S. This summer, Juul had captured 68 percent of the U.S. e-cigarette market, according to Nielsen data compiled in a Juul investor presentati­on viewed by Bloomberg. The company’s growth has

made Juul a lucrative bet for its few shareholde­rs, which include Tiger Global Management and Fidelity Investment­s.

Juul’s success has also made it a target of regulators who say the company’s sales are driven by teens, who think sucking on a Juul is cool and fun. The FDA says youth vaping jumped 75 percent in the past year. In 2017, more than 2 million middle and high school students used e-cigarettes, according to government data.

On Tuesday, Burns acknowledg­ed the crisis and said teen use was an unintended consequenc­e. ‘Our intent was never to have youth use Juul products. But intent is not enough,’ Burns said in a statement provided by Juul. ‘The numbers tell us underage use of e-cigarette products is a problem.’

Burns said Juul would eventually renew sales of its flavored products in retail outlets that used ageverific­ation technology. Juul declined to provide a specific timeline for when it would allow retailers to sell again.

 ?? JUUL LABS ?? Colorful nicotine-filled pods, pictured on the right, are inserted into the Juul e-cigarette. The company will still sell the pods through its website to age-verified consumers.
JUUL LABS Colorful nicotine-filled pods, pictured on the right, are inserted into the Juul e-cigarette. The company will still sell the pods through its website to age-verified consumers.

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