The poorly enforced restrictions on vaping products represent millions in lost revenue for the government and retailers.Credit:AP
The industry group’s submission to a review conducted by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) adds to a polarising debate over how best to deal with Australia’s runaway vaping market,after the federal government began consulting late last year on ways to deal with e-cigarette demand among school-aged children.
Health groups including the Cancer Council and Minderoo Foundation have been calling for an all-out ban on non-prescription vapes and stronger action to stop illegal imports at the border,warning of e-cigarettes’ adverse health outcomes.
Meanwhile,pro-vaping groups and some doctors promote vaping as a smoking cessation tool,and are warning against excessive regulation. Their proposals,as well as those from health experts and state governments,will be made public by the TGA after submissions close.
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New laws the Coalition introduced in 2021 require people to obtain a doctor’s prescription to buy legal vape products. However,the restrictions have not stemmed consumer use or illicit supply:NSW Health data published last year showed11 per cent of people aged 16 to 24 years old reported being current vape users – more than double the number than 2020 – while in Victoria,afive-year-old boy was hospitalised last February after vaping at school and consuming high doses of nicotine and other chemicals.
In the Australian Association of Convenience Stores’ submission to the TGA,Foukkare said vaping was now “completely mainstream in Australia” and the government would never be able to stop young people using the products under its current conditions.
“The right way forward is tight regulation with standards in place,and allowing adults to purchase regulated nicotine vapes through a licensed framework for responsible retailers,” he told this masthead.