France to impose restrictions on e-cigarettes

Eurasia News

Health Minister Marisol Touraine on Friday said France would apply the same bans to electronic cigarettes as it does to tobacco but would not completely outlaw the popular smokeless product.

It means that advertising of so-called e-cigarettes will be banned, as will their sale to under-18s and their use in public places, a measure that has been in place for tobacco since 2007.

“I have decided that the measures which apply to tobacco will also be extended to electronic cigarettes,” Touraine told a press conference coinciding with World No Tobacco Day.

Invented in China in 2004, the e-cigarette has a diode that heats up a liquid, usually containing propylene glycol, nicotine and flavourings, delivering it as a gas to the lungs with each draw.

The user exhales vapour, but not smoke, a practice called “vaping.”

The argument in favour of the devices is that they do not have the tar, ash and toxins found in conventional cigarettes.

For health experts, though the jury is still out.

The UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO) has said that the safety of e-cigarettes “has not been scientifically demonstrated… (And) the potential risks they pose for the health of users remain undetermined.”

Several countries, including Colombia, Panama and Uruguay, have banned e-cigarettes. In April, Italy raised the legal limit for buying them from 16 to 18, citing the potentially high dose of addictive nicotine that is inhaled.

French newspapers on Friday carried large advertisements from anti-tobacco groups calling for cigarette companies to be hit with a special tax to help meet the health bills of people who fall sick from smoking, at a time when ministerial budgets are being cut.