Tag: e-cigarettes

  • California’s E-Scrap Recycling Program Excludes ENDS

    California’s E-Scrap Recycling Program Excludes ENDS

    Credit: Sharaf Maksumov

    The newly expanded e-scrap recycling program signed by California Governor Gavin Newsom will not include vaping products. AB 2440 and SB 1215 set up an extended producer responsibility program for loose batteries and added battery-embedded products to the Electronic Waste Recycling Act of 2003.

    Newsom signed the bills Sept. 16 as part of a package of climate-related bills, according to Resource Recycling.

    Under SB 1215, consumers will be required to pay an electronic waste recycling fee upon the purchase of certain new or refurbished products starting Jan. 1, 2026. However, a covered battery-embedded product is one containing a battery “that is not intended to be easily removed from the product by the consumer with no more than commonly used household tools,” the bill’s text states, excluding medical devices, energy storage systems and electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) products.

    “This month has been a wake-up call for all of us that later is too late to act on climate change. California isn’t waiting any more,” Newsom said in the press release. “Together with the Legislature, California is taking the most aggressive action on climate our nation has ever seen.”

  • New British Standards for Vaping Quality and Safety

    New British Standards for Vaping Quality and Safety

    Photo: Lezinav

    The British Standards Institution has developed a fast-track informal standard, PAS 8855, to address quality, performance and safety issues related to vaping products, reports ECigIntelligence.

    The new PAS (publicly available specification), sponsored by Juul Labs, recognizes the progress made in the construction and use of e-cigarettes since PAS 54115 was issued in 2015.

  • Several Studies Refute Link Between Vaping, Smoking

    Several Studies Refute Link Between Vaping, Smoking

    An anti-smoking group announced that several studies have found no evidence that the use of e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products (HTPs) are leading non-smokers and youth towards cobustible cigarette smoking in countries such as the U.S., the UK, Australia, Japan, France and Switzerland.

    Action on Smoking and Health (ASH)-UK cited the results of five large surveys of 11 to 16-year-olds in the UK between 2015 and 2017 showing that “most young people who experiment with e-cigarettes did not become regular users,” according to media reports.

    “Overall, there is no evidence that e-cigarettes have driven up smoking prevalence in this age group. In fact, smoking prevalence among young people has declined since e-cigarettes came onto the market,” ASH-UK stated.

    A time-series analysis conducted by researchers led by Emma Beard between 2007 and 2018 in the UK showed that the increase in the prevalence of e-cigarette use in England among the entire sample does not appear to have been associated with an increase in the uptake of smoking among young adults aged 16 to 24.

    A 2022 study by University of Bristol researchers found that, based on the “current balance of evidence, using triangulated data from recent population-level cross-contextual comparisons, individual-level genetic analyses and modeling, we do believe, however, that causal claims about a strong gateway effect from e-cigarettes to smoking are unlikely to hold, while it remains too early to preclude other smaller or opposing effects.”

    A 2020 study by Dr. Colin Mendelsohn and Wayne Hall concluded that claims of vaping serving as a gateway to smoking are unconvincing. “Smoking more often precedes vaping than vice versa, regular vaping by never-smokers is rare and the association is more plausibly explained by a common liability model,” they stated.

    Another comprehensive analysis of whether vaping causes smoking uptake was published by the University of Queensland in Australia. That study concluded also that there was little evidence of a gateway effect. If a gateway effect does exist, it is likely to be small, the study said.

    A 2021 study by Wayne Hall and Gary Chan on the “gateway” effect of e-cigarettes found that “e-cigarette use has not been accompanied by increased cigarette smoking among young people in the United States, as would be the case if e-cigarette use were a major gateway to cigarette smoking.”

  • Supreme’s Growth Driven by Vapor Product Sales

    Supreme’s Growth Driven by Vapor Product Sales

    guy holding 88vape e-cigarette
    Credit: 88Vape

    The UK-based wholesale vaping product distributor and manufacturer Supreme stated in a press release Thursday that trading in the current financial year remained in line with the company’s market expectations.

    The AIM-traded firm, which was holding its annual general meeting, stated that it delivered a strong performance for the year ended March 31, underpinned by organic growth across its leading divisions, as well as acquiring complementary businesses.

    Paul McDonald, chairman of Supreme, stated the company had continued to develop an “extensive network” of customers across the retail space, and was “delighted” with the progress made in increasing its retail penetration, alongside the positive impact of recent brand and product launches.

    “Trading for the current financial year remains in line with market expectations, with the business well-placed to deliver on our strategic aspirations, supported by the recent acquisitions of vaping business Liberty Flights and the purchase of trade and assets of Cuts Ice and Flavour Core,” McDonald stated.

    “Our fast-growing vaping category continues to underpin the group’s growth.”

    Alongside the strong performance of Supreme’s 88vape brand, including new customer wins across grocery and convenience retail, McDonald stated that the company is committed to evolving its vaping segment as evidenced with the recent acquisitions of Liberty Flights in June, and Cuts Ice and Flavour Core in August.

    McDonald said the two transactions were “highly complementary and immediately earnings enhancing,” and would deliver scale to the group, adding that the company was “well-placed” to help mitigate the impact of inflation on consumers.

    “Looking ahead, we continue to explore additional merger and acquisition opportunities to complement the group’s organic growth, and the board remains confident in Supreme’s strategic ambitions, underpinned by the exciting prospects within vaping,” he stated.

  • Norcia: FDA Amps up Attacks on Unauthorized Vapes

    Norcia: FDA Amps up Attacks on Unauthorized Vapes

    Credit: Puwasit Inyavileart

    During an interview with Politico on Sept. 6, Brian King, the director of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), would not say whether the agency was willing to take unauthorized vaping products off the market.

    In his first interview since taking the reins of CTP, King said that he was “committing to explore all viable pathways that are legally and scientifically defensible,” adding that “nothing is off the table.”

    He did not acknowledge anything about the commission of external experts looking into CTP procedures, however, writes Alex Norcia of Filter, the agency is already in the process of seeking court orders, threatening lawsuits and demanding the destruction of unauthorized next generation nicotine products.

    Filter has confirmed that the FDA, by September 1, advised the Department of Justice (DOJ) that at least two open-system vape companies were in violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) because the manufacturers did not file premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) and were continuing to sell their products,” Norcia writes. “According to a letter to one of the vape companies, viewed by Filter, the feds are seeking court orders, threatening lawsuits and demanding the destruction of unauthorized products.”

    CTP has denied an estimated 99 percent of marketing applications and dozens of companies have sued over their denials, which they have largely argued were “arbitrary” and “capricious.”

    “We plan to seek a court order to permanently enjoin you … from, among other things, directly or indirectly manufacturing, distributing, selling, and/or offering for sale any new tobacco product at or from any of your facilities, unless and until, among other things, the product receives, and has in effect, marketing authorization from FDA,” reads the letter, signed by DOJ Senior Litigation Counsel Christina Parascandola and dated September 1. “The enclosed proposed consent decree,” it continues, “states the terms upon which the government would be willing to settle the suit that we plan to file.”

    Filter agreed not to disclose the names of the individuals and companies that received the letters (one of the companies has now ceased business operations) because of the possibility that litigation could unfold. The FDA did not respond to Filter’s request for comment by publication time.

    “Defendants shall bear the costs of destruction and the costs of FDA’s supervision.”

    One industry insider, who requested anonymity so as not to affect his company’s PMTA process, said that the letter was “a clear escalation”—the first time, to his knowledge, that the FDA had gone beyond warnings and explicitly threatened to sue over sales of unauthorized nicotine vapes.

    “Their exercise of enforcement discretion to date has reached almost legendary proportions, so this would be at least a small deviation from that,” Cliff Douglas, the director of the University of Michigan Tobacco Research Network and the American Cancer Society’s former vice president for tobacco control, told Filter. “My sense is that there are many, many instances of such behavior across the country, which Mitch Zeller and others have referred to as requiring FDA to play whack-a-mole, so a big question would appear to be whether this signals a new direction or is a random example of enforcement action.”

    The two companies known to have received letters, at least, have been ordered to physically destroy their own products, under FDA supervision, according to Norcia.

    “Within thirty (30) days after entry of this Decree, Defendants shall, under FDA’s supervision and pursuant to a written destruction plan approved in writing by FDA prior to implementation, destroy all Defendants’ ENDS products in their custody, control, or possession as of the date this Decree is signed by the parties,” the letter reads. “Defendants shall bear the costs of destruction and the costs of FDA’s supervision incurred under this paragraph.”

  • InterTabac to Open in Dortmund After 2 Covid Delays

    InterTabac to Open in Dortmund After 2 Covid Delays

    Photo: Messe Westfalenhallen

    InterTabac will take place at the Dortmund Exhibition Center from Sept. 15 to Sept. 17. More than 600 exhibitors from all over the world are expected, presenting a wide range of products from classic tobacco products to new products.

    The fair will open with a press conference on Thursday at 11:30 a.m. The German Association of the Tobacco Industry and New Products will present current market data with general manager Jan Mucke and report on the challenges for the industry, according to the industry group Deutscher Zigarettenverband.

    Billed as the world’s largest tobacco trade show, the event was scheduled to take place Sept. 16-18, 2021. The 2020 event was also cancelled. In 2019, 13,800 people attended the event which had over 500 exhibitors from 47 countries according to Intertabac.

  • Kaival Brands’ MDO Stay Boosts its Quarterly Results

    Kaival Brands’ MDO Stay Boosts its Quarterly Results

    Photo: crizzystudio

    Kaival Brands Innovations Group reported revenues of $3.8 million for the third quarter of fiscal year 2022, up from $3.2 million for the same period of 2021. Gross profit was $442,100 compared to a loss of $84,300 for comparable 2021 period.

    Kaival attributed its improved revenues in part to an August court ruling that set aside a marketing denial order issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to the company’s nontobacco flavored Bidi Stick e-cigarettes. Arguing that the agency had insufficiently considered Kaival Brands’ marketing and sales access restriction plans, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ordered the FDA to further review Kaival’s premarket tobacco product applications, allowing the company to continue to market its products.

    “The recent 11th Circuit ruling in favor of Bidi Vapor alleviated a significant barrier to our adult-focused B2B sales efforts, which we believe will once again allow us to materially scale our business, grow revenue, move toward net profitability in the future and increase shareholder value,” said Kaival Brands President and Chief Operating Officer Eric Mosser in a statement.

    Mosser added that the company is working with Philip Morris to expand international distribution into new global markets. In June, Kaival Brands Innovations Group’s subsidiary, Kaival Brands International (KBI), entered into a licensing agreement with Philip Morris Products (PMP) for the development and distribution of electronic nicotine-delivery system products outside the U.S.

    “We expect to begin recognizing revenues from this international licensing agreement in our fiscal fourth quarter,” said Mosser.

    In July, Kaival announced the launch of PMP’s Veeba vapor product in Canada, with royalties due to KBI pursuant to the international licensing agreement.

  • Second Chance: MDO Legal Win Presents Opportunity

    Second Chance: MDO Legal Win Presents Opportunity

    Photo: andranik123

    How companies can make the most of a recent court ruling requiring the FDA to reassess thousands of PMTA rejection notices.

    By Neil McKeganey

    It would be hard to overstate the threat that youth vaping in the United States poses to the use of e-cigarettes as a means of tobacco harm reduction. Respected national surveys have shown a rising trend in youth vaping, with the threat to the vaping industry as predictable as night following day.

    Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb could not have been clearer in signaling that threat when he said that the offramp to adult smoking could not be justifiably achieved at the cost of the on-ramp of teen vaping. If anybody was in any doubt about the risks that youth vaping poses to the entire e-cigarette industry, those doubts would have surely been extinguished in the recent ruling against Juul Labs, which required the company to pay in excess of $438 million to compensate states for the harms caused by past marketing practices increasing the likelihood of youth using their eponymously named vaping device.

    For vaping companies, the threat of youth vaping may have lifted slightly in a recent U.S. court ruling requiring the FDA to pay attention to what vapor companies are doing in trying to restrict youth access to their products. Odd as it may sound, after having encouraged vapor companies to pay attention to their marketing and sales practices in light of the rising trend in youth vaping, the FDA’s position appears to have been that those efforts were almost certainly doomed to fail, with youth accessing what are often easy-to-conceal vaping products with relatively little difficulty through their social networks.

    With vapor companies having invested heavily in age verification software, point-of-sale restrictions and in the removal of flavored e-liquids, it would have been a bitter pill to swallow to be told that the regulators had largely ignored those efforts to reduce youth access to their products.

    The logic behind the FDA’s decision seems to have been that it would be easier to expedite the large number of premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) by adopting a “Fatal Flaw” approach—rejecting those applications that did not present data from either longitudinal customer studies or randomized trial evaluations and simply ignoring what the companies were doing to lessen the likelihood that their products would be found in the hands of youth.

    By ruling against the FDA in legal action initiated by six vapor companies that had received marketing denial orders without the FDA even paying attention to their youth sales restriction efforts, the judges have effectively provided vapor companies with a second chance to have their PMTA applications reassessed.

    So, what should vapor companies do given the legal victory that has been dropped in their lap? Clearly, it is going to be important for companies to do all they can to restrict youth access to their vapor products. But actions taken by these companies is not the same thing as being able to present evidence to the FDA that their products are not being used by youth.

    To this end, research undertaken by the Centre for Substance Use Research (CSUR) in Scotland may help many of the companies concerned. For the last two years, the CSUR has been measuring the prevalence with which over 200 e-cigarette devices are being used by youth and adults within the United States. This ongoing research provides vapor companies with product-specific data showing the extent to which their products are being used, or more crucially, are not being used by youth.

    Valuable as the data from this study undoubtedly are, vapor companies also have to be able to show the benefit of their products to adult smokers. The fastest route to obtaining this data is through an actual use study in which adult smokers using a company’s vapor products are monitored over a number of weeks to determine how many smokers are able to quit or reduce their cigarette smoking through using the company’s vapor products.

    To obtain a marketing authorization, vapor companies have to be able to show two things—that their products are not being used by youth and that they can help adult smokers in quitting or reducing cigarette consumption. Succeed in these two things and vapor companies can have a bright future. Fail in either one and the future looks a lot bleaker.

  • Alaska Governor Vetoes Vape Purchasing Age Increase

    Alaska Governor Vetoes Vape Purchasing Age Increase

    Credit: Eyegelb

    Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy vetoed SB 45, a bill that would have raised the minimum age to purchase e-cigarettes and other tobacco products in the state from 19-years-old to 21-years-old. The move would have brought the state in line with federal minimum age requirements.

    The governor vetoes the bill because it also included the implementation of a tax on e-cigarettes and other vaping products.

    The bill sought to create parity in the excise tax rate on electronic smoking products, which are currently not subject to state-level taxes as they are not considered either cigarettes or other tobacco products (OTP).

    The bill would have subjected electronic smoking products to a tax rate of 35 percent of the wholesale price, which would still be less than the state’s rate of 75 percent of the wholesale price on other tobacco products.

    “Governor Dunleavy’s decision to veto this bill is a huge relief to Alaskans who rely on vaping products to stay away from deadly combustible cigarettes. Rejecting the tax hike will also make it easier for those who currently smoke to achieve cessation using vapor products, said Tim Andrews, director of Consumer Issues for Americans for Tax Reform. “Governor Dunleavy’s veto was necessary and highly appropriate. As a proud signer of the ATR Taxpayer Protection Pledge, Governor Dunleavy has made a commitment to his constituents to oppose all tax increases. This veto is proof of his dedication to the taxpayers of Alaska and we applaud this pro-science, pro-taxpayer decision.”

    Dunleavy did not say whether or not he supported the age increase, but noted that it is not possible to separate out components of a bill once it has been passed by the legislature.

    “There were many conversations about what an appropriate level to tax would be, but ultimately a tax increase on the people of Alaska is not something I can support,” Dunleavy wrote in his veto letter to Senate President Peter Micciche.

    Since the governor vetoed the bill after the adjournment of the legislature’s second regular session, the veto will not be addressed unless a special session is called before the next legislative session convenes, according to Halfwheel.

  • Wheeler: FDA Understates PMTA Acceptance Numbers

    Wheeler: FDA Understates PMTA Acceptance Numbers

    Amanda Wheeler (Credit: AVM)

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is understating the number of non-tobacco nicotine (NTN)-related premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) it has accepted for review in order to avoid criticism from tobacco control groups that seek prohibition of all vaping products, reports Vaping360, citing American Vapor Manufacturers Association (AVM) President Amanda Wheeler.

    On Sept. 8, the FDA announced it has accepted over 350 PMTAs (out of nearly 1 million applications) for NTN products. Wheeler insists that AVM member companies alone have received acceptance letters for 4,700 PMTA submissions.

    “Once again the FDA and its Center for Tobacco Products are misleading the public and press on crucial data and methods in its approval process for vaping products,” Wheeler said in a statement. “The figures stated in its press release today on synthetic nicotine applications are demonstrably inconsistent with FDA letters to our own members indicating many thousands more applications successfully filed than FDA now claims.”

    An acceptance letter indicates that the application has met the basic requirements to move forward in the review process. It does not authorize the applicant to market the product.

    The AVM also says the FDA altered required PMTA forms close to the submission deadline to disqualify already-submitted applications. According to Wheeler, the application forms were “abruptly altered” without public notice, “apparently as a means to disqualify wide swaths of already-filed applications.”

    In March, U.S. President Joe Biden signed legislation authorizing the FDA to regulate synthetic nicotine products. Manufacturers had until May 14 to submit PMTAs, and were given two additional months to continue selling products with pending PMTAs. When the grace period ended July 13, all synthetic nicotine-based products became subject to FDA enforcement.