Tag: e-cigarettes

  • New Louisiana Vape Law May be Defacto Flavor Ban

    New Louisiana Vape Law May be Defacto Flavor Ban

    Credit: Jet City Image

    Louisiana passed a law that raised taxes on nicotine e-liquids. However, the new rules could result in most vape products being taken off the shelves.

    The legislation, Act 414 by Rep. Paul Hollis, started out as a bill to increase the tax on vapes, with Hollis saying he wanted to discourage their use. But it quickly morphed into a broader law that dramatically scales back what vapes can be sold, after wholesalers, major tobacco companies and legislators concerned with youth use got involved.

    The law Edwards signed triples the tax on vape liquid from 5 cents per milliliter to 15 cents per milliliter and earmarks the revenue the tax will generate for pay raises for state troopers, according to NOLA.com.

    But the bigger impacts have to do with a new registry pushed by the major tobacco companies and large wholesalers.

    The law, which goes into effect in November, will require any vapes sold in Louisiana to be authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to be marketed in the U.S.

    Some other products could be sold if litigation is ongoing, but the state Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control will be able to fine retailers for unapproved products.

    The new rules allow for only a handful of companies to sell vaping products in Louisiana, including R.J. Reynolds and Altria, major tobacco companies that sell Vuse and NJoy products, respectively.

    Both companies lobbied significantly on changes to the bill, including the registry.

    Effectively, the law could ban the vast majority of flavored vapes being sold in Louisiana. A wholesaler testified in a committee hearing that the list would tamp down on popular disposable vapes such as EscoBars, Puff Bars and Elf Bars, which have drawn the ire of regulators and lawmakers across the country.

    The FDA has cracked down on Elf Bars recently, telling retailers to stop selling them and halting imports.

    Hollis said Altria and Reynolds, along with wholesalers who argued the state was missing out on tax revenue by allowing retailers to bypass it and buy products from vape manufacturers, were among those who negotiated the final law.

    The new law now requires products to go through wholesalers.

    The law could also mean a de facto ban on flavored vapes because the FDA has not approved any flavored products other than tobacco. Reynolds, with its top-selling Vuse brand, only sells tobacco and menthol-flavored products.

    A Reynolds spokesperson said in a statement that “illegally marketed disposable” vapes, often imported from other countries, have “subpar regulatory oversight,” and that getting such products off the shelves will protect youth while allowing adult smokers options beyond combustible cigarettes.

    “The creation of a marketing order registry, and the state tax increase which will fund it, will help the public and retailers in assessing the legitimacy of vapor products before hitting the store shelves,” the company said. “Reynolds also urges the FDA to put together a list of products that can be legally sold in the US.”

    iMiracle, the maker of Elf Bars, said it was “concerned that the true objective of this law has been obscured from both the general public and Louisiana voters.”

    “Louisiana legislators should take a careful look at who promoted and who benefits from this legislation, and whether they want to limit their adult constituents’ access to harm-reduction products,” a company spokesperson said, adding it is evaluating the law’s “applicability and legality.”

    The state Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control will be tasked with enforcing the new law by fining retailers who sell products not authorized by the FDA.

    ATC chief Ernest Legier said he hasn’t yet had time to closely review which products will be allowed, but that industry representatives have suggested as much as 60 percent of the products currently on the shelves could be removed.

  • Taiwan Warns Visitors of Fines for HnB Products

    Taiwan Warns Visitors of Fines for HnB Products

    Credit: Johan10

    Individuals visiting Taiwan who bring heated tobacco products into the country could be subject to a maximum fine of NT$5 million ($161,186), the Health Promotion Administration (HPA) warned Tuesday.

    The fine will be imposed whether the products are brought in for the traveler’s own recreational use or were bought on behalf of somebody else, the HPA said in a statement.

    Under a revision of the Tobacco Hazards Prevention Act that took effect in March, new tobacco products, such as heat-not-burn (HnB) or heated tobacco products (HTPs), and the components necessary for their use, are banned in Taiwan unless they have been approved after a health risk assessment by the Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW), according to Focus Taiwan.

    Only if they are approved can they be manufactured or imported, the HPA said. To date, no HTP has been approved by the MOHW, according to the health promotion body.

    Liu Chia-hsiu, an official with the HPA’s Tobacco Control Division, said the manufacture, import, sale, supply, display, advertising and use of designated tobacco products that have not been approved could be subject to a fine of up to NT$50 million.

    The fine for bringing heated tobacco products into the country is between NT$50,000 and NT$5 million, Liu said, while the penalty for those caught using them is NT$2,000 to NT$10,000.

    While vaping products are banned, lawmakers said HnB products would be regulated.

  • FEELM Wins 7 Times at MENA Vape Awards in Dubai

    FEELM Wins 7 Times at MENA Vape Awards in Dubai

    Credit: FEELM

    The closed-system solution provider for the world’s largest atomization company, Smoore, captured seven prestigious awards at the Vapouround Mena Vape Awards 2023 held during World Vape Show Dubai.

    FEELM, a subsidiary of Smoore, earned high praise at the vent and was crowned Best Manufacturer and Industry Leader beating out a roster of international competition.

    Speaking after the ceremony, Rex Zhang, assistant president of FEELM said it was an honor to be recognized as a main player in the industry.

    “This is especially exciting considering FEELM also walked away a winner at the Vapouround Global Awards in the UK earlier this year,” he said. “We pour huge amounts of time, effort and resources into optimizing our brand to be the best it can be and developing new technologies that can level up the vape category as a whole – these awards act as proof that we are very much on the right track.”

    As well as celebrating its own successes at the Dubai event, FEELM also saw some of its clients take to the winner’s podium. Vape brands PYRO, Aroma King and DEJA VOO – which use FEELM technology in their products – won Best Newcomer, Industry Leader and Best Disposable respectively.

    Adding to the list of accolades for brands using FEELM technology, RELX garnered the Best Brand award and also received recognition for its WAKA device securing the runner-up position for Best Newcomer.

    “Congratulations to both of these companies. It’s great to see exceptional brands, who are doing exceptional things, get the recognition they deserve,” said Zhang.

    The Vapouround MENA Awards coincides with the World Vape Show (WVS) in Dubai, which is one of the biggest expos in the industry calendar.

    FEELM used this year’s WVS event as an opportunity to showcase its latest technological developments such as FEELM Max, Topower and Power Alpha.

  • UK Motor Group Calling for Ban on Vaping While Driving

    UK Motor Group Calling for Ban on Vaping While Driving

    Credit: Monkey Business

    A motoring group in the United Kingdom is calling for the government to change laws on vaping and driving. With vaping at record levels, motoring experts at LeaseCar.uk are calling for an urgent ban on smoking e-cigarette devices when behind the wheel, according to an emailed press release.

    In the UK, it is a legal requirement to drive with due care and attention, and the experts at LeaseCar.uk say there is no way people can adhere to this standard of driving while vaping. Aside from causing drowsiness and dizziness, the devices emit vast clouds of smoke, which restricts vision, making it impossible to be aware of surroundings, the release states.

    “Drivers not in complete control of their vehicle could receive penalties such as an unlimited fine, 9 points and a discretionary disqualification,” the release states. “In extreme cases, if someone is injured or killed due to careless driving, they could be jailed.”

    In the UK, the only current law around smoking and driving is that it is illegal to smoke with someone under 18, but this doesn’t apply to vaping. Tim Alcock from LeaseCar.uk said that it is only a matter of time before there are more fatalities on the road due to vaping.

    “There has been growing concern over the effects of vaping, but we do know that there are high levels of nicotine in the devices, which is highly concerning from a driving point of view,” he said. “E-cigarettes that contain nicotine cause dizziness and lightheadedness, which is highly dangerous, putting both the driver and other road users at risk.

    “It is appalling that drivers are still allowed to vape with children in the car given the immediate dangers on the road and long-term medical side effects which are still being researched. Not only that, as people puff at the devices, the vast clouds of smoke create a massive hazard as it blocks and restricts vision. We are calling for the government to make urgent changes to current motoring offenses and consider just how dangerous vaping at the wheel is.”

  • U.S. CDC Makes Confusing Statements in Latest Report

    U.S. CDC Makes Confusing Statements in Latest Report

    Credit: JHVE Photo

    Monthly e-cigarette sales skyrocketed during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new study published Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “In the United States, the prevalence of e-cigarette use is markedly higher among youths and young adults than it is among adults overall. In 2021, 4.5% of all adults aged ≥18 years (an estimated 11.1 million) and 11.0% of young adults aged 18–24 years (an estimated 3.1 million) currently (≥1 day during the previous 30 days) used e-cigarettes; during 2022, 14.1% of high school students (an estimated 2.14 million) currently used e-cigarettes,” the CDC’s weekly Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).

    However, in 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau counted 331.4 million people living in the United States; more than three-quarters (77.9 percent) or 258.3 million were adults aged 18 years or older and 30 million (of the 258.3 million) were aged 18-24. The Annie E. Casey Foundation confirms the CDC data. In 2019, 15.3 million students enrolled in high school (9th to 12th grade). Many U.S. high school students turn 18 before graduating high school, as well.

    Major media outlets such as ABC News are now reporting that “the CDC noted in its report that e-cigarette use is more common among young people than adults overall” even though the statement is misleading at best.

    The agency also states that e-cigarette sales boomed in 2020. Between January 2020 and December 2022, monthly unit sales increased by 46.6 percent, from 15.5 million units to 22.7 million units, the study found. Studies have also shown that combustible cigarette sales plummeted during the same time period.

    Researchers found the surge in vape sales was mostly driven by disposable e-cigarettes in flavors, including fruit and candy, which are popular among youth and young adult users, and several studies have found they are also preferred by adults who have quit combustible cigarettes..

    Additionally, while the share of pre-filled e-cigarette cartridges decreased from 75.2 percent to 48 percent of total sales, the share of disposable e-cigarette units increased from 24.7 percent to 51.8 percent of total sales.

    The study found this may be due to an announcement the U.S. Food and Drug Administration made in January 2020 that prioritized enforcement against prefilled cartridges in flavors other than tobacco and menthol.

    Disposable vaping products were the first e-cigarettes to be distributed broadly across the U.S. After winning a landmark lawsuit against the FDA in 2010, the Njoy King became the bestselling e-cigarette on the market after just a few years.

    By 2017, pod systems became more popular as battery technology improved. It was easy to switch between flavors, and the rechargeable battery lowered the cost of products for consumers compared to disposable devices.

    Open systems were popular too, but pods were easier and cleaner without the chance of spilling e-liquid everywhere. The versatility of pod systems helped vaping become more mainstream.

    Then in January of 2020, the FDA created an unnecessary problem. The regulatory agency stepped in under the guise of a youth vaping “epidemic” and banned the sale of all flavored (except tobacco and menthol) pod-style vaping products.

    Today, disposable vapes are the best-selling e-cigarettes, and millions are disposed of improperly every year, according to industry data.

  • UK’s Leading Vape Shops Support Disposables Ban

    UK’s Leading Vape Shops Support Disposables Ban

    VPZ store in Bruntsfield, UK
    Credit: VPZ

    The head of one of the leading retailers and manufacturers of vaping products in the United Kingdom says he would support a ban on disposable vapes as long as it did not create a black market.

    Doug Mutter, company director of VPZ, said a ban in Australia had led to unsafe products being sold there illegally.

    He insists the industry recognizes that the environmental impact of single-use products needs to be addressed.

    An urgent review of disposable products was ordered by the Scottish government and is due to be released within days, reports Yahoo! News.

    It was commissioned after a campaign by climate activist Laura Young who had been collecting dozens of disposable vapes each day while walking her dog Cooper in Dundee.

    The review is likely to quantify the scale of the problem and lay out the options available to ministers.

    Disposable vapes are a problem because they contain lithium batteries which should be taken to a recycling facility for disposal.

    But millions are either discarded or thrown into bins each year where they can cause a fire at processing facilities.

    Refillable vapes are available which are much cheaper to use in the long term and have less of an environmental impact.

    VPZ has 150 stores throughout the UK.

    Mutter – who is also the director of the UK Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) – said disposables have a place for smokers who would like to try vaping but do not want to invest in reusable systems.

    He acknowledges the environmental impact of them and their attractiveness to young people who do not already smoke.

    “For me, there should be a ban on disposables that we would support if there were proper punishments and policing put in place to enforce the ban and ensure that a black market doesn’t bubble up,” said Mutter.

    Enforcement should be funded by a licensing scheme, he said, which retailers would have to be a part of to sell vaping products.

  • FEELM’s Topower Brings More Puffs, Better Battery Life

    FEELM’s Topower Brings More Puffs, Better Battery Life

    A new disposable vape battery solution was showcased during the World Vape Show Dubai, held from June 21-23.
    The pioneering power technology developed by FEELM, a subsidiary of the world’s largest atomization technology company Smoore, is intended for markets that allow higher puff counts and has been designed to increase the endurance of single-use devices.

    When compared to mainstream batteries, the new Topower offers 30 percent more capacity with the battery size remaining unchanged and can deliver over 6,000 puffs without needing to be recharged.

    Topower also provides a constant power output that reduces the loss of taste caused by voltage drop.

    FEELM says the new innovation also boasts the “longest shelf life in the industry,” according to a press release, promising just 1 percent power attenuation over six months and 3 percent over a year – which the brand says is 1/10th the level seen in traditional batteries.
    “This is our new battery technology customized for higher puff disposable vape, with large puff vaping without charging, ultimate-low discharge, ultimate-high energy density,” said Rex Zhang assistant president of FEELM. “The end goal for our industry is to create a smoke-free future and unburden adults from the harms of deadly cigarettes – technology is going to play a leading role in achieving this.”

    Zhang said the no-charge element of Topower was beneficial not just for brands, but for consumers as well. He said the battery solution eradicates the need for additional charging cables, which eliminates the necessity for internal charging devices and consequently saves on production costs.

    He also said consumers would no longer need to “worry about when and where they could next plug their disposable, which can reduce user anxieties and create a more convenient vaping experience,” according to the release.

    Topower has been incorporated into two solutions – FEELM Max’s ceramic coil disposable solution and Power Alpha‘s mesh coil solution.

    FEELM Max and Power Alpha have already been extensively commercialized and have achieved considerable success in multiple countries.

  • Zanzibar to Ban Import and Consumption of  Vape Products

    Zanzibar to Ban Import and Consumption of Vape Products

    Zanzibar authorities plan to impose a ban on import and consumption of shisha and e-cigarettes, according to The Citizen.

    “We are all witnesses—the consumption of shisha and e-cigarettes has become commonplace, and we shall come up with a special regulatory law to govern those who will have special permits to import and sell shisha or electric cigarettes,” said Masoud Ali Mohammed, Zanzibar’s minister of state, office of the president, regional administrations, local governments and SMZ departments.

    Current importers have been advised not to restock products but rather to reach out to authorities for new directives. “Do not order more products after your current stock is depleted,” said the minister. “You will have to follow the new laws that the government is going to issue.”

  • July 1 is Start Date for New Louisiana Vaping Tax

    July 1 is Start Date for New Louisiana Vaping Tax

    Credit: Summer

    A new law that increases the tax on vaping products in Louisiana takes effect on July 1.

    But some vape shop owners say it is not the tax hike that bothers them the most about the new law.

    Rep. Paul Hollis, from St. Tammany Parish, authored the bill that Governor John Bel Edwards signed into law.

    “Basically, what we’ve done, we’ve increased the excise tax placed on vape products. Currently, it’s 5 cents, on July 1 it will go to 15 cents per milliliter,” said Hollis.

    Hollis said revenues from the higher tax will benefit La. State Police. “We put this vape tax and we dedicate it to the state police salaries and the legislature obviously believes are long overdue. I’m embarrassed by what we currently pay state police, especially new officers,” said Hollis.

    Landon Naquin said he owns Gotta Stop in Houma and is in the vape product business, according to FOX8Live.

    “I’m actually not opposed to a tax increase within reason and I find that it’s in reasonable amount because frankly, the state has been losing money recently because so many people within my own business are transitioning from cigarettes to E-cigarettes and the state’s not collecting that revenue from the cigarettes they used to collect,” said Naquin.

    Under the new law, beginning on October 1, vape product manufacturers and makers of alternative nicotine products that are sold in Louisiana will have to execute and deliver the certificate to the commissioner of the La. Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control stating the product was on the market in the U.S. as of August 2016.

    Naquin thinks that will have a significant impact.

    “It pretty much only legally allows for three remaining products to remain on the market,” he said.

    And the law calls for the ATC commissioner will have to develop and maintain a directory listing all vape and alternative nicotine product manufacturers that have provided certifications that comply with that law.

  • Smoore Introduces Power Alpha to Dubai Vapers

    Smoore Introduces Power Alpha to Dubai Vapers

    The world’s leading global atomization technology company, Smoore, displayed its new disposable solution, Power Alpha, at the World Vape Show 2023 in Dubai (June 21st – 23rd).

    Power Alpha debuted at the TPE 2023 in Las Vegas, where it garnered widespread attention and praise for its unprecedented features and advanced technology. This time in Dubai, Power Alpha again overwhelmed company leaders, distributors, and dealers in the vaping industry with its four transformative features: no charge, no burn, no fade, and convenience of use.

    Power Alpha is a charge-free solution for large-puff disposable devices that solve issues disposable vape users face, including short battery life, charging inconvenience, and fading flavor and a burning taste after recharging, according to a press release.

    “These unique features of Power Alpha have fueled the market success of some major players in the vaping industry in North America, as it allows these companies to receive a flood of positive consumer feedback,” the release states.

    What makes Power Alpha a game changer are two patented technologies – a Topower battery and a Corex atomizer.

    Common charge-free vapes usually offer 2500~3000 puffs with a battery capacity of 950 mAh. But disposables employing Topower deliver twice as many puffs and have a large capacity of 2000 mAh, with the battery sizes remaining almost unchanged.

    The large 2000 mAh capacity supports an uninterrupted 6000-puff vaping experience means consumers do not need to recharge and look for their charging cables midway through the vaping. In addition, this battery technology also ensures stable output throughout its life.

    Corex atomizer technology takes the vaping experience to a whole new level with its upgraded mesh coil. Eco-Mesh, which is eco-processed and pollution-free, brings a consistent and mouthful taste due to the 200 percent increase in the precision of the mesh structure and the 50 percent faster heating speed.

    Corex’s patented cotton design increases the e-liquid conductivity by 15.8 percent and improves the e-liquid absorption by 23.5 percent, making the atomization more powerful and efficient.

    Another notable design is the F1 airflow, which brings consumers a clean vaping experience by improving the smoothness by 30 percent and eliminating the condensation by 100 percent.

    Power Alpha, a groundbreaking solution developed by Smoore over the past two years, not only retains the convenience of non-rechargeable disposables but also increases the number of puffs to 6000, which offers an exceptionally cost-effective option to consumers.