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New Environment Minister "committed" to vape ban

New Environment Minister

Friday 09 February 2024

New Environment Minister "committed" to vape ban

Friday 09 February 2024


The new Environment Minister has committed to continuing the work on tackling vaping and is "looking at the most effective and quickest way" for a ban on disposable e-cigarettes to be introduced in Jersey.

However, Deputy Steve Luce admitted that it is a "complex issue", and said that Government would "need to speak with vape retailers, users, young islanders and other stakeholders before introducing any potential ban".

It comes as the UK government last month announced plans to ban disposable vapes to tackle the rising number of young people taking up vaping.

Measures will also be introduced in the UK to prevent vapes being marketed at children and to target under-age sales.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak suggested adult smokers trying to quit would still have access to alternatives like vapes under the proposals, but said it was right that "strong action" was taken to stamp out vaping in children.

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Pictured: The 2023 Opinions and Lifestyle report showed that e-cigarettes are increasingly used as an aid in quitting smoking, but that there has also been a rise in use among youngsters and non-smokers.

Statistics from the UK show that the number young people vaping is rising year-on-year, and Jersey is facing the same issue.

Statistics Jersey's Opinions and Lifestyle Survey – which asked around 1,500 islanders about their habits, health and views – recently revealed that half of those between the age of 16 and 34 had experimented with vaping.

Despite laws against selling vapes to under-18s in Jersey, the 2021 Jersey Children and Young People Survey further found that 58% of 16- to 17-year-olds had tried e-cigarettes, with about one-third using them occasionally or regularly.

One Jersey secondary school recently pledged to crack down on vaping in a letter to parents which informed them of their "crucial involvement" in tackling the "serious issue" of underage vaping.

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Pictured: Last year, a joint investigation by Express and the JEP revealed that local shops were selling vapes that would be illegal in the UK.

A joint investigation by Bailiwick Express and the Jersey Evening Post revealed how sweet-inspired flavours, highlighter-style packaging, and a lack of regulation meaning products that are illegal in the UK can still be sold locally had helped spawn what one local doctor described as a "generation of nicotine-addicted kids" in Jersey.

Ministers last year announced plans to ban disposable vapes, which they said was for "both environmental and health-related reasons".

The proposed ban would be subject to consultation, but could be introduced through an extension of the Single Use Plastics Law which would come under the remit of the Environment Minister.

However, it would also require input from the Health Minister, the Infrastructure Minister, and the Economic Development Minister.

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Pictured: Recently appointed Minister for the Environment, Deputy Steve Luce.

Recently appointed Minister for the Environment, Deputy Luce said: “I committed, in the States Assembly this week, to continuing the work on disposable vapes and looking at the most effective and quickest way for any such ban to be introduced.

“Officers have already been looking at which mechanism or laws would be best for this, and I will sit down with them for a briefing in the next few weeks.

"This is an area that will require close joint working across the Council of Ministers, particularly with the Minister for Health, the Minister for Infrastructure, and the Minister for Sustainable Economic Development."

He added: “Disposable vapes can contain plastic, glass, cardboard, a microprocessor, a small battery and chemicals. The separated parts can be recycled, but it’s a complicated, manual process that takes a lot of time and resource. We know many users simply throw them in the bin after use, and there are also concerns from a health perspective.

“I recognise that this is a complex issue, and we’d need to speak with vape retailers, users, young islanders and other stakeholders before introducing any potential ban.”

READ MORE...

Parents urged to talk with students about "serious issue" of vaping

New stats show rise of Jersey's 'Gen-V' vapers

Gen-V: How 'highlighters' and lax regulation have spawned new 'smokers' in Jersey

Ministers to investigate taxing vape products

Goodbye disposable vapes? Ministers announce ban plan

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