Saturday Star

Vaping organisati­on fears death of industry

- SAMEER NAIK sameer.naik@inl.co.za

THE Vapour Products Associatio­n of South Africa (VPASA) says it fears that the vaping industry in South Africa could be decimated should the new tobacco bill become law.

The government is determined to make smoking tougher in South Africa with its latest tobacco plan. The laws will include tighter regulation­s on e-cigarettes and vaping devices.

The Department of Health hopes the Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill will discourage people from smoking and encourage users to quit.

Laws such as smoking or vaping in private in the presence of a child or non-smoker will be forbidden, and plain packaging with limited branding will also appear on cigarette boxes.

In addition, it is alleged the bill highlights the minister’s powers to prohibit e-liquid or vape juice.

Asanda Gcoyi, CEO OF VPASA, said should the bill be put into law, it could signal the end of the vaping industry in the country.

“The vaping industry as we know it in South Africa will be completely destroyed,” Gcoyi told the Saturday Star. “The vaping industry was taken aback by the extensive revisions made to the bill since it was first published in 2018.

“While the Cabinet statement announcing the adoption of the bill noted that the Department of Health had conducted extensive consultati­ons, it convenient­ly failed to state that other than anti-tobacco campaigner­s, no other stakeholde­rs had seen a copy of the revised bill before it was gazetted on 29 September. This is despite numerous requests for a copy made by industry stakeholde­rs.”

Gcoyi said they weren’t against stricter laws. All they want is for the vaping industry to be regulated.

Gcoyi said, ”But proposals that are on the table are not based on science or empirical evidence. Substantiv­ely, the bill is a complete disappoint­ment in its treatment of ENDS/ENNDS (Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems and Electronic Non-nicotine Delivery Systems). It will be detrimenta­l to the industry.

“The bill still conflates vaping and smoking as if they are one and the same thing. Vaping requires a separate set of guidelines recognisin­g that it is not the same as smoking and therefore cannot be regulated in the same manner.

“It opens a route for government

to ban the sale of flavoured e-liquids. Such a move is likely to prove entirely detrimenta­l to the fight against tobacco smoking. Flavours are what keep smokers who have switched to vaping from reverting to smoking.”

“The validity of arguments about fruit and dessert flavours appealing to young people entirely misses the fact that vapes are manufactur­ed for the

use of smokers. Communicat­ion and design should not be restricted except to prevent communicat­ions that target youth or misleads consumers. A general safety warning is important.

He added that banning the online sale, supply and distributi­on of vaping products is detrimenta­l. “If you look at the majority of the vaping industry, [it is] small businesses and brick and mortar [retailers] in any industry are no longer attractive, especially coming out of Covid. So, to do away with that [online vaping stores], that kills a third of the industry already.”

Gcoyi added that with the new bill, the Minister of Health would also have free reign in introducin­g regulation­s without consultati­on.

“The minister will be able to introduce regulation­s as he sees fit, without going through the rigorous law-making process and thorough consultati­on with stakeholde­rs.”

Gcoyi said it was important that South Africa gets legislatio­n that allows consumers to choose proven less harmful alternativ­es to cigarettes.

“Insisting on categorisi­ng tobacco and vaping products under one umbrella gives the impression that they are equally harmful to one’s health. However, as research by reputable internatio­nal organisati­ons, such as Public Health England, the Royal College of Physicians, the US Academy of Sciences, and Cancer Research UK, etc., shows, vaping is less harmful than smoking.

“Our view is that lumping the two things together is likely to perpetuate the false perception that they are the same, when in fact, they are not.

“Such a perception is likely to discourage many smokers who do not wish to quit their addiction to nicotine from considerin­g vaping as an alternativ­e source of nicotine, thus continuing with their far more harmful addiction to combustibl­e tobacco.”

Gcoyi said while she acknowledg­es that vaping is not completely riskfree, she says it only contains a small fraction of the risk of cigarettes.

“ENDS/ENNDS do not produce tar or carbon monoxide, two of the most harmful elements in tobacco smoke. The liquid and vapour, however, contain some potentiall­y harmful chemicals also found in cigarette smoke, but at much lower levels. Additional­ly, despite a large body of available scientific evidence suggesting that nicotine is dangerous, on its own, it does not cause cardiovasc­ular disease or cancer. The substance is, however, considered an addictive substance.”

Gcoyi says while they welcomed a new tobacco bill, it was important that vaping was regulated separately.

“A new tobacco bill is very important. We know that tobacco kills its users so measures to control the use of tobacco are to be welcomed. This includes making it possible for adult smokers to use less harmful alternativ­es.”

 ?? ?? IF THE bill is passed, government could ban the sale of flavoured e-liquids.
IF THE bill is passed, government could ban the sale of flavoured e-liquids.

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