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UK to ban disposable vapes starting June 2025 to crack down on teen use

Nearly 5 million disposable vapes discarded weekly in 2023

UK to ban disposable vapes starting June 2025 to crack down on teen use

A disposable vape advertisement is seen in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Britain, September 14, 2023.

Reuters

Current law already prohibits sales to under-18s

Stats show one in five children aged 11-17 have tried vaping

Ban aims to protect both environment and youth health

The sale of single-use vapes will be banned in England from June next year, the British government said on Thursday, seeking to crack down on the environmental harm and rising usage levels among children.

Vaping has grown rapidly in Britain in the last decade, with nearly one in 10 people buying and using the products, according to the government.

Supporters say vapes can help people give up smoking, but health authorities are concerned that their colorful designs and fruity flavors are designed to attract children.

An exhibitor staff member uses an electronic cigarette at the International Vapor Distribution Alliance Expo, July 24, 2015.Reuters

The plan to ban disposable vapes was initially set out by the previous Conservative government in January, alongside a move to ban anyone aged 15 and under from buying cigarettes - some of the strictest anti-smoking rules in the world.

The Labour government also plans to introduce a full smoking bill, as part of what it called "the biggest public health intervention in a generation" to protect young people from becoming hooked on nicotine.

Vapes popular with kids despite ban

According to a 2024 survey by health charity ASH, about one in five children aged 11-17 said they had tried vaping.

It is illegal to sell nicotine-containing e-cigarettes to anyone under the age of 18.

"Banning disposable vapes will not only protect the environment, but importantly reduce the appeal of vapes to children and keep them out of the hands of vulnerable young people," said minister for public health and prevention, Andrew Gwynne.

Almost five million single-use vapes were dumped on the ground or thrown away in general waste every week in 2023, the government said. They then end up in landfill or being incinerated, posing a fire risk due to their lithium-ion batteries.

Health charity ASH has called for a balance in the proposed Tobacco and Vapes Bill to ensure that regulations do not undermine the value of vapes as an aid for tobacco smokers.

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