- 17.01.2023
- News
French-speaking cantons ban the sale of electronic cigarettes to minors
The canton of Jura recently introduced this measure and the Vaud government has come out in favour of banning the sale of disposable electronic cigarettes, known as "puff bars", to minors. Such a provision already exists in many other French-speaking cantons. At the national level, we still have to wait for the new Tobacco Products Act (TPA) to enter into force, unfortunately!
Photo: Truth Initiative
The canton of Vaud wants to protect minors against the harmful effects of disposable electronic cigarettes (puff bars). It will submit to the Grand Council a modification of three laws, so that the legal framework is the same for them as for traditional cigarettes and tobacco. Currently, electronic cigarettes, puff bars, and other related products, with or without nicotine, are still covered by the law on foodstuffs in the canton of Vaud.
Vaud remains the only French-speaking canton not to have yet adopted a law on this subject. After the canton of Jura, which modified the corresponding ordinance in December, it is now Vaud’s turn to ban the sale of electronic cigarettes and their disposable versions, particularly popular with young people, to minors.
In particular, the government proposes:
- Passive smoke (LIFLP): ban on the use of electronic cigarettes and similar products in indoor or closed public places;
- Sales (LEAE): tobacco, nicotine, or similar products cannot be given to minors; sales outlets are subject to authorisation and can be subject to test purchases (as is currently the case with tobacco);
- Advertising (LPR): bans of advertising of tobacco, nicotine, or similar products, or products forming a functional unit with these products, extended to events and to private places accessible to the public.
In addition, the Regulation on the Application of Compulsory Education (RLEO) has been modified by 1 January 2023: students are prohibited from consuming or possessing tobacco, nicotine, or similar products (during class hours).
No national solution before 2024
In cantons where electronic cigarettes, puff bars, and related products are not subject to “tobacco products” legislation, minors have easy access to these highly addictive and harmful products. Moreover, young people are at risk of later switching to traditional cigarettes after having smoked puff bars. So far, only 10 Swiss cantons have introduced a ban on the sale of puff bars to minors, five of which are in French-speaking Switzerland. At the national level, such a ban will only be put in place with the entry into force of the Tobacco Products Act (TPA) And this will probably not happen before 2024. Given the spectacular increase in sales of these products – AT Switzerland expected a massive increase of 2,200% in 2022 – the situation remains problematic and worrying.
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