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Health, waste and enforcement organisations welcome the Government’s decision to proceed with a ban on the sale of disposable vapes from the 1 st June next year. Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), Material Focus and Chartered Trading Standards Institute have worked collaboratively to raise concerns about the impact of these single-use products on the environment and their links to the increase in teen vaping.
The ban confirmed today is unlikely on its own to be sufficient in addressing these issues but is a welcome indication of the Government’s intention to address the problems in the vaping market and is backed by the public.
When there is a viable alternative to disposable products the Government is right to push ahead with this ban. The public are fed up of seeing disposable vapes littered across our communities and the proposed regulations are already driving changes in the market with more reusable versions of popular disposable brands being sold. However, while the ban is an important show of intention from the government, without further product and branding regulations this ban will be insufficient to address the popularity of vapes among teenagers. The Government must introduce the proposed Tobacco and Vapes Bill swiftly.
When a disposable vape ban comes in, vapes still do need a special category under environmental regulations, which would allow the government to set clear collection targets and can only help in the move to get those profiting from vapes to cover the costs of dealing with them. Too many companies are currently dodging their share of £200 million/year responsibility for collection and recycling. In our research 5 million single-use vapes are currently binned or littered every week in the UK creating a staggering amount of waste. With the ban due to come into place, this means 150 million vapes will be thrown away, losing all the precious materials contained in vapes forever such as lithium and posing fire risks. For those that vape, they should never bin them, or any electrical item, and instead take them back to where they bought them from.
The regulations will give trading standards the powers to ensure retailers comply with the law. Additional funding to resource these new powers will also be necessary and we look forward to the outcome of the spending review and confirmation that this funding will be available.
We welcome action to curb youth vaping and address environmental concerns but the most vulnerable groups of smokers must not be forgotten. Smokers with mental health conditions are more likely to be using disposable vapes currently and many inpatient mental health setting will only allow disposable vapes to be used. The NHS needs to support trusts and patients to transition to reusable products and ensure more people are supported to stop smoking.
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