Tag: news

  • Vaporesso Launches Two New Products in Dubai

    Vaporesso Launches Two New Products in Dubai

    Vaporesso, the open system arm of the world’s largest atomization company, Smoore International, unveiled two groundbreaking products, the Vaporesso COSS and Vaporesso ECO, at the World Vape Show held at the Dubai World Trade Centre from June 21 to 23.

    “We are thrilled to introduce Vaporesso COSS and Vaporesso ECO to more vapers at the show. These two revolutionary products are set to enhance the vaping experience, with their user-friendly features and eco-friendly design,” said Jimmy Hu, vice president of Vaporesso.

    The COSS is being labeled as a “game-changer in the vaping industry,” according to a press release. The system addresses the pain points of existing products and offers an intuitive design that caters to the vaping habits of users.

    “The product’s slogan, Convenient Operating, Smart Supplying, embodies its features. The Vaporesso COSS boasts the smallest size of vaping device and the longest battery life,” according to the release. “It also comes with an automatic liquid filling and charging feature. With Coil-oil Separation System, the Vaporesso COSS ensures a fresh taste without any leakage, and its consistent taste is a unique feature that sets it apart from other products.”

    The ECO emphasizes the value of being eco-friendly, economical, and eco-self, according to the release. It is refillable and rechargeable. Along with its larger capacity, longer battery life, reduced heavy metal content, and leather paper packaging that can be reused and recycled, the ECO is more cost-saving, eco-friendly, and safer for both the environment and humans when compared to disposable products. The product’s daily usage costs are reduced by 60 percent, which makes it accessible to a wider audience.

    “In addition to COSS and ECO, the company also has an IP counter featuring its highly popular XROS Series and LUXE X Series, along with a special display counter for its TARGET Series and GEN Series,” the release states.

  • Juul Labs Accuses NJOY Maker of Patent Violations

    Juul Labs Accuses NJOY Maker of Patent Violations

    Juul Labs has asked the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) to block sales and imports of the NJOY Ace vapor device, claiming that the product infringes several Juul patents. It has also filed a complaint against NJOY with the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona.

    “Our technology, designed internally and in the U.S. and protected by our robust patent portfolio, has been the most effective product development to transition adult smokers from combustible cigarettes—switching over 2 million adult smokers in this country. Innovation is critical in this space to advance tobacco harm reduction,” said Juul Labs Chief Legal Officer Tyler Mace in a statement.

    “When others infringe on our technology, we have no choice but to protect our intellectual property rights.”

    This ITC complaint follows three prior successful actions from Juul Labs at the Commission, which all resulted in barring the importation and sale of infringing products, according to Juul Labs.

    “Just like we have in three prior successful ITC actions that vindicated our company’s IP rights, we intend to reach the same result here,” said Mace.

    The Juul Labs complaint also targets Altria Group, which agreed to acquire the NJOY in March after exchanging its minority investment in Juul for a heated tobacco product intellectual property license.

    The NJOY Ace device received marketing authorization from the Food and Drug Administration in April 2022.

  • CTP Touts Progress Addressing Reagan-Udall Goals

    CTP Touts Progress Addressing Reagan-Udall Goals

    Brian King, director of U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), published a statement summarizing the CTP’s progress in addressing the recommendations from the Reagan-Udall evaluation.

    At the request of FDA Commissioner Robert Califf, the Reagan-Udall Foundation evaluated the CTP’s operations. In December, the foundation submitted its report, which identified several problems hindering the agency’s ability to regulate the industry and reduce tobacco-related disease. Among other recommendations, the foundation urged the CTP to make process improvements and increase transparency.

    According to King, the CTP has made significant strides in putting its plans for improvement into action. The agency, he said, is on track to issue proposed goals this summer, and to release the final plan by December 2023. The CTP intends to hold a public meeting in the summer of 2023 to seek stakeholder feedback about the strategic plan.

    Meanwhile, said King, the CTP Ombuds Office is leading the creation of an operational strategy to improve transparency and information sharing across all programmatic areas, including establishing transparency liaisons. Externally, the center is planning for upcoming public meetings to gather stakeholder input. CTP also published a webpage of all the tobacco products-related citizen petitions received by the center to provide the public with information about such citizen petitions that is easy to access and user-friendly.

    According to King, the center has reviewed 99 percent of tobacco product applications submitted over the past three years, authorizing 23 tobacco-flavored e-cigarette products and devices. The CTP is planning a public meeting in fall 2023 regarding the application review process.

    Meanwhile, the center is in the process of finalizing rules related to menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars and continues to work toward publishing a proposed rule that would establish a maximum nicotine level to reduce the addictiveness of cigarettes and certain other combusted tobacco products.

    CTP also recently proposed new requirements for tobacco product manufacturers regarding the manufacture, design, packing and storage of their products.

    King also highlighted the CTP Office of Science leadership’s participation in conferences and external meetings. For example, representatives from the Office of Science recently presented at the Food and Drug Law Institute’s Nicotine Product Regulatory Science Symposium, the E-Cigarette Summit and the TMA annual meeting (see Todd Cecil’s TMA presentation here).

    “I am proud of the significant progress the center has made to date in addressing the external evaluation recommendations, and I am confident that we’ll continue to make important strides in continuing to build and strengthen FDA’s tobacco program in the future,” said King.

    A comprehensive list of CTP status updates for each Reagan-Udall Foundation recommendation is available here.

  • The Vape Sectors in Egypt and Israel are Growing

    The Vape Sectors in Egypt and Israel are Growing

    The vaping markets in Egypt and Israel vary, but both are thriving and helping smokers switch.

    By Norm Bour

    The Middle East has always been full of smokers, and vaping has made an impact, but not to the same degree as other countries. While in Israel, I visited a few vape shops in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and there were some immediate similarities between them and the U.S. There were also significant differences.

    Mendel Silverman works at the Drop Shop in Jerusalem and has been in the business for several years. When Silverman moved from the U.S. to Israel, he took up hookah—until he realized how unhealthy it was and switched to vaping.

    “The industry is very robust, and unfortunately one of the biggest weaknesses is customer service,” he confessed, though that has been the bane of the vape space since the beginning. “We are lucky because we still have enough leeway to offer our own [e-liquid] mixes in a variety of nicotine levels, from 0 to 18 and about a dozen in between. And [nicotine] salt is a big seller, even though the regulators have made it more difficult and taxed the hell out of it.”

    Both Israel’s finance and health ministries aimed to tax vaping products at the same rate as cigarettes. Maintaining that vaping is just as dangerous as smoking, the health ministry initially sought an even higher tax. According to Israel Hayom, an Israeli news outlet, Finance Committee chairman Alex Kushnir “reduced the conversion formula by 30 percent compared to what the Ministry of Health wanted.”

    That tax comes out to be ILS21 ($5.75) per millimeter, which equals 270 percent of the wholesale cost, plus $4.94 per milliliter of e-liquid, which is the second highest e-liquid tax rate in the world.

    E-cigarettes and e-liquids are regulated in Israel under the Tobacco Act, and they are subject to the same restrictions as combustible cigarettes. However, Israel’s health ministry has recently discussed the possibility of banning marketing of electronic cigarettes. The ministry said, “options are being examined due to two difficult cases and the widespread phenomenon,” referring to the increase of youth using e-cigarettes.

    Watching Silverman add ingredients to a bottle of base—basic PG and VG—was a throwback to the U.S. pre-restrictions days when vape shops in the U.S. could do the same thing.

    “We don’t sell any off-the-shelf flavors,” he shared. “But we can add menthol, flavors and nicotine to match (consumer) needs, and we can sell it cheaper than if we sold a name brand bottle that was complete.”

    The owner of Drop Shop started the business selling products from the trunk of his car 10 years ago, a theme that appears to recur worldwide. As demand grew, he opened his first retail shop, which was robust until 2019 when the government banned importation of e-liquids with more than 2 percent nicotine. That devastated the business, so Silverman started creating his own flavors, paid tax on the nicotine and moved into a smaller shop.

    Like their counterparts elsewhere, Israeli regulators justified charging higher taxes with the need to curb sales to minors, but such measures are usually equally driven by a desire for money. Even though the market is hurt, sales to all age groups continue, and the taxation affected cigarettes as well but not to the same degree.

    Universally, excessive taxation of nicotine has created an underground movement in Israel, with many vapers making their own juices. It also pushed many vapers back to smoking. I shared my surprise at seeing many “religiously dressed” people smoking. “The yeshiva world, which involves the study of the Torah and Rabbinic text, has always been heavily into tobacco because it also includes the social aspect of it,” explained Silverman. Students and practitioners gather in coffee shops and similar places, and they all smoke together. In many cases, they do not have much of a life outside their studies, so tobacco is even more significant.”

    According to the Israel Ministry of Health, smoking rates of the 21-plus crowd have been hovering at about 20 percent for several years, including a large percentage of military members. We finished our conversation by talking about the game changer of the past few years: disposable products.

    According to Silverman, most Israeli consumers are looking for the simplest way to vape, but they have more interest in the nonrefillable versions even though they are more expensive.

    The bottom line for vaping, taxes and smoking in Israel is that most things will probably remain status quo until or unless something seriously rocks the boat.

    Over the Border

    The vape scene in Egypt is totally different. For many years, vape products were illegal and mostly underground, but that changed in May 2022 when vape products were legalized. Considering that the industry is very much in its infancy, it still has a ways to go.

    “The lifting of the ban highlights the Egyptian authorities’ progressive approach to e-cigarettes and sets the stage for the creation of a regulated market rich with business opportunities through serving the demand for easily accessible, quality products by legal age (adult) consumers across the country,” wrote RELX International, a leading player in the segment, in a statement last year.

    With its decision to legalize vaping, Egypt joins global and regional markets, such as Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have also legalized and commercialized the consumption of e-cigarettes. As regulators around the world become more accepting of e-cigarettes, the market is expected to continue its steady growth in the coming years.

    To complicate the situation, Egypt has a considerable problem with counterfeit products, so it appears that regulated and ethical vape shops have a huge obligation to help smokers quit.

    In Cairo, a city of 22 million people, the vape scene is a wide-open opportunity, but finding a vape shop, a true vape shop, proved challenging. Google calls them “vape shops,” but they are more like small kiosks with a limited selection of products.

    Many Egyptians are familiar with vaping and the advantages it offers, but true knowledge is rare, and even in a city that large, there were only a handful listed. However, by lifting the ban on e-cigarette products, Egyptian authorities have opened the door to a plethora of business and investment options, according to RELX International.

    “Authorized e-cigarette products are traditionally retailed by small-sized and medium-sized businesses, so the move will bolster existing businesses that sell such products and will attract entrepreneurs wishing to set up new retail points across the country. It will likewise draw investment into the country from e-cigarette brands who wish to set up shop in the country and address the market,” the company wrote in its statement. 

    How much vaping will be embraced by smokers is another story. One in four Egyptians smokes, a ratio that has remained consistent for the past two decades. As high as that number is, Egypt remains near the bottom of the 20 countries with the highest percentages of smokers.

    Times are changing, though. In May 2023, the Egypt Vape Expo was held at the Cairo International Convention Center. This event marked the first legal e-cigarette expo in Egypt and attracted many players from B2B channels in North Africa and the Middle East, according to attendees. Many said the show was a success.

    The Middle East has long been a black hole for the vaping industry, and it’s only recently that the government has opened the doors for entrepreneurs. However, the success of vaping businesses remains to be seen.

    Norm Bour is the founder of VapeMentors and works with vape businesses worldwide. He can be reached at norm@VapeMentors.com.

  • New Zealand Urged to Reject Australia’s Regulatory Model

    New Zealand Urged to Reject Australia’s Regulatory Model

    Photo: REDMASON/indysystem

    The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) is calling on the New Zealand government to reject Australia’s approach to vaping and continue to follow the science and evidence. 

    CAPHRA has submitted comments on New Zealand’s proposals for the smoked tobacco regulatory regime, which include tightening current restrictions on vaping product safety requirements and packaging and reducing nicotine levels in disposable vapes as well as restricting the location of specialist vape retailers.

    “CAPHRA believes that the regulations, as they are, work perfectly well, and that further restrictions will only serve to limit access to safer nicotine products for adult smokers seeking less harmful alternatives to combustible tobacco,” says CAPHRA executive coordinator and prominent New Zealand public health consumer advocate Nancy Loucas.

    “The announcement that New Zealand would not follow Australia’s lead to a full prescription model for nicotine vaping further reinforces the need for a harm reduction approach that is based on science and evidence, not scaremongering by crowing Australians.”

    CAPHRA believes that the regulations, as they are, work perfectly well, and that further restrictions will only serve to limit access to safer nicotine products for adult smokers seeking less harmful alternatives to combustible tobacco.

    In a press note announcing its submission to New Zealand’s proposals, CAPHRA cites an article in The Critic, “The Vape Scare Down Under,” which describes the Australian government’s approach to vaping is misguided and based on fear rather than evidence. The article argues that the government’s proposed ban on flavored e-cigarettes is not supported by the evidence and will only serve to drive vapers back to smoking. The article also highlights the success of vaping in reducing smoking rates in countries like the U.K. and New Zealand.

    “Unfortunately, the vaping debate has become highly political instead of being about the science or the evidence which continues to show that vaping is reducing smoking rates around the world,” says Loucas.

    CAPHRA continues to urge the New Zealand government to take a risk-proportionate approach to regulations that protect public health while ensuring the availability of these products for adult smokers seeking less harmful alternatives to combustible tobacco.

    “New Zealand should not follow Australia’s policy on vaping, and instead continue to follow a harm reduction approach that is based on science and evidence. Harm reduction should be the driving force behind tobacco policy, and regulations should be risk-proportionate and protect public health while ensuring the availability of these products for adult smokers seeking less harmful alternatives to combustible tobacco,” Loucas said.

  • New Deadline for South Africa Vape Rules Comments

    New Deadline for South Africa Vape Rules Comments

    Credit: Sharaf Maksumov

    The Portfolio Committee on Health in South Africa has announced that public consultation on the new Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill will end on July 28.

    In a media statement from Parliament, the government said that written submissions on the bill must be emailed to tobaccobill@parliament.gov.za or submitted online at https://forms.gle/FLrhnvThDk8ccLG97.

    As reported on June 22, the submission period was originally between June 21, 2023, and August 4, 2023.

    The bill aims to regulate not only traditional tobacco smoking but also electronic cigarettes, such as vapes which have become immensely popular not only as a means to stop smoking normal cigarettes but as a gateway into nicotine consumption.

    In broad terms, the bill aims to regulate the sale and advertising of both tobacco products and electronic delivery devices, reports Business Tech.

    Parliament stated that: “the bill will also focus on legislating electronic nicotine and electronic non-nicotine delivery systems; introduce plain packaging with graphic health warnings and pictorials; introduce a total ban on display at the point of sale; introduce 100% smoke-free areas – indoor public places and certain outdoor areas; and a total ban on vending machines for tobacco products.

    At the start of the month, the Portfolio on Health briefed Parliament on the new bill with mixed reactions. Many stakeholders were concerned as to the severe knock-on effects the new bill could have on the tobacco/smoking industry, which is a key driver of economic growth in South Africa.

    Members of Parliament said that the bill could lead to more people turning to the already budding illicit tobacco industry and lead to job losses.

    Speaking specifically regarding vape products, Asanda Gcoyi, the chief executive of the Vapour Products Association (VPASA), said that combustible alternatives to traditional cigarettes should form the backbone of tobacco harm reduction in South Africa and be seen more as a solution to a problem rather than a new problem.

    She said that the government has managed to demonize vaping, marking it as more damaging than traditional cigarettes.

    Vapes are not only getting regulated by the new bill but are also being drawn into the ambit of excise taxes, as provided in the updated Tobacco Product Excise.

    Barry Buchman, the managing director of Vaperite, said that the newly imposed excise duty on vaping products has taken its toll on retailers, with many arguing that the tax has had the adverse effects of driving consumers towards the illicit market.

    Buchman added that the tax is pushing consumers to purchase the highest and most addictive nicotine-content-e-liquid as it is a cheaper option, negating the original aim of the National Treasury to tackle health-related issues.

  • IEVA Joins InterTobac With VIP Lounge for Members

    IEVA Joins InterTobac With VIP Lounge for Members

    The Independent European Vape Alliance has partnered with InterTabac and InterSupply to exhibit and support the event’s seminar program.

    According to a press release, the IEVA will have its own space for the first time at InterTabac and InterSupply at the end of September.

    This will comprise a dedicated exhibition area and an exclusive lounge for IEVA members only, and the association will also contribute to “maintaining the high quality of the supporting program” with a high-caliber discussion panel.

    Sabine Loos, managing director of Westfalenhallen Unternehmensgruppe which owns and operates the Messe Dortmund venue where InterTobac and Intersupply are held, said the organization is delighted to welcome the IEVA as a new partner.

    “The collaboration underlines the importance of our events and the international reputation they enjoy. I’m convinced the IEVA’s proposition will be a valuable enrichment, especially for representatives of the vaping industry that is performing well despite a difficult overall environment,” said Loos.

    Dustin Dahlmann, IEVA chairman, said his group is looking forward to the opportunity to present the messages of the responsible vaping industry to a wide international audience.

    “The IEVA is committed to a nuanced public perception and regulation of e-cigarettes as a harm-reducing alternative to smoking, and InterTabac and InterSupply provide the right forum for publicizing this further – in 2023 and at future editions of the twin shows,” he said.

  • 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.