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The English government intends to ban the sale of disposable vapes beginning June 1, 2025, and the three other UK members—Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales—will implement similar laws around the same time.
The Labour Party-led government announced in an Oct. 24 press release that a bill has been introduced in Parliament to ban disposables. The government also intends to pass the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which includes additional regulatory powers over vaping and a so-called “smokefree generation” law that would raise the legal age for buying tobacco (not vapes) by one year every year.
Both initiatives were first proposed by the rival Conservative (Tory) Party, but are even more popular with left-leaning Labour. The Conservative government, which lost in a July general election, began discussing a disposable ban over a year ago. Former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced in January that his government intended to ban disposables, limit e-liquid flavors, and impose packaging and display restrictions.
While they were in power, Conservatives also introduced a steep vape tax—set to go into effect in 2026—which is also supported by the current Labour leadership (although Labour may add additional levies).
Passage of these vaping restrictions is virtually guaranteed, since both major parties support them. It’s rare for rival political parties in any democracy to see eye to eye on an issue, but the Tories and Labour seem to have achieved complete harmony on vaping over the past year.
Vaping laws must be passed separately by each member of the UK, because as health laws they fall into a group of legislative categories controlled by the individual countries—called “devolved” powers. However, all of the UK governments agree on the need for a disposable ban, and according to the press release will align their dates of implementation.
The government wants to eliminate disposables (which it calls “single-use” vapes) largely for environmental reasons. According to a widely cited 2023 study by non-profit group Material Focus, 30 million disposable vapes are bought monthly by British adults, and only 17 percent of users report recycling them.
The ban, says UK Circular Economy Minister Mary Creagh “is the first step on the road to a circular economy, where we use resources for longer, reduce waste, accelerate the path to net-zero and create thousands of jobs across the country.”
But according to a Cancer Research UK-funded study published earlier this year, such a ban would affect 2.6 million adults and “could have substantial unintended consequences for people who smoke.”
In addition to environmental concerns, political leaders believe disposables are somehow uniquely irresistible to adolescents, and prohibiting the products will make the UK’s youth vaping problem disappear.
“Banning disposable vapes will not only protect the environment,” said Public Health and Prevention Minister Andrew Gwynne, “but importantly reduce the appeal of vapes to children and keep them out of the hands of vulnerable young people.”
There is no evidence that kids who want to vape will not vape whatever vape products happen to be available, but politicians and public health officials are perpetually convinced that curious, risk-taking adolescents need some external impetus (like flavors, bright colors, or apparently "disposability") to activate their desire to engage in adult things.
“It is like banning cider to deter underage drinking,” wrote the Institute of Economic Affairs’ Christopher Snowdon. “Cider is disproportionately popular with teenagers, but if they couldn’t get hold of it, they would drink something else.”
What a disposable ban will do, of course, is ensure that gray and black market will have a stranglehold on the sale of these popular products.
Vaping for: 13 years
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Favorite flavors: RY4-style tobaccos, fruits
Expertise in: Political and legal challenges, tobacco control haters, moral panics
Smokers created vaping without help from the tobacco industry or anti-smoking crusaders, and I believe vapers have the right to continue innovating to help themselves. My goal is to provide clear, honest information about the challenges vaping faces from lawmakers, regulators, and brokers of disinformation. I’m a member of the CASAA board, but my opinions aren’t necessarily CASAA’s, and vice versa. You can find me on Twitter @whycherrywhy
You can find me on Twitter @whycherrywhy