FRANCE: France is set to ban disposable e-cigarettes – known locally as “puffs” – because of the danger they pose to the environment and public health.
Speaking recently on RTL radio, Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne said the measure was part of a new anti-smoking plan being drawn up by the government. It should be in force by the end of the year, campaigners said.
Several other countries in Europe, including Germany, Belgium and Ireland, have announced similar bans. The UK is also said to be considering one.
Sold over the counter by tobacconists, disposable vapes in France cost around €9 (£7.70) – less than a packet of 20 cigarettes. They are supposed to offer around 600 puffs – the rough equivalent of 40 cigarettes.
But France’s National Academy of Medicine described them as a “particularly sly trap for children and adolescents”.
According to Élisabeth Borne, “they create a reflex, a gesture, which children get used to, and then end up being drawn to tobacco”.