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Nottingham News ... : disposables again - raids, illegal etc

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https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/nottingham-news/illegal-chinese-vapes-appealing-child-6924528

Illegal Chinese vapes which are 'appealing to a child' seized in Nottingham raids

Illegal vape products worth thousands of pounds have been seized during an operation across Nottingham. Trading Standards officers in the city bagged up hundreds of vaping products - some of which contain five times the legal amount of nicotine and e-liquid.

The branded vape bars collected have a street value close to £8,000. The operation involved eight separate premises across the city, although they have not been named.

The average vape product carried up to 1,500 uses – the equivalent of smoking more than 50 cigarettes. One particular brand of the disposable, single-use vapes seized was equal to more than 100 cigarettes.

Illegal vapes are often fruit-flavoured and brightly coloured to make them more attractive to children. It is illegal to sell these products to under 18s but super-strength vapes pose another level of risk to all users.

They are unregulated and there is no way of knowing what other toxic substances they may contain. Environmental concerns were also highlighted around the waste battery aspect of the devices, millions of which are imported every year – mostly from China.

In total, 1,103 disposable vaping devices were removed from sale as they were either not labelled correctly in accordance with the TARP Regulations, did not contain sufficient CLP regulation information, had a capacity of over the legal limit of 2ml or had not been published or regulated by the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA). Councillor Neghat Khan, Portfolio Holder for Neighbourhoods, Safety and Inclusion at Nottingham City Council, said: “Trading Standards treat the sale of nicotine vaping products as a high priority, especially where children are concerned. The rapid expansion of this market for disposable nicotine devices is worrying and presents real risks to the environment and health, especially that of young people.”

Paul Dales, Chief Environmental Health Officer at Nottingham City Council, said: “Our officers found a wide range of non-compliant vaping devices, with both safety and health risks. While some people use vaping to quit smoking, there is a real risk that these products can attract young people into experimentation and addiction. The current craze with disposable, brightly-coloured and flavoured e-cigarettes can be child appealing and that is unacceptable.

“Parents may not realise their children are vaping these unsafe devices. They are attractively coloured and closely resemble highlighter pens or make-up products. They usually cost from £5 to £7 each.”
 
Should be naming the shops selling them to ensure public safety, by avoiding said places.
 
close the shops down i say.

so at £5 each with 2ml thats £100 for 20ml of vape juice they have no idea whats in it.
 
They should also consider removing their licences to sell tobacco/nicotine products. Many will consider confiscation and potential fines worth the risk if the profits are there, but if they can't sell ciggies they will lose a lot of trade. The last thing they want is for locals to go to a different corner shop.
 
Makes me wonder if Trading Standards are tracking down where these shops are getting them from.
 
Probably either china direct or manchester i would say
 
If direct it doesn't say much for customs. Why Manchester?
There is an industrial estate of suppliers up there - some legit - some not so much

at least that was the case for a few years - i assume its still the same
 
https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/nottingham-news/illegal-chinese-vapes-appealing-child-6924528

Illegal Chinese vapes which are 'appealing to a child' seized in Nottingham raids

Illegal vape products worth thousands of pounds have been seized during an operation across Nottingham. Trading Standards officers in the city bagged up hundreds of vaping products - some of which contain five times the legal amount of nicotine and e-liquid.

The branded vape bars collected have a street value close to £8,000. The operation involved eight separate premises across the city, although they have not been named.

The average vape product carried up to 1,500 uses – the equivalent of smoking more than 50 cigarettes. One particular brand of the disposable, single-use vapes seized was equal to more than 100 cigarettes.

Illegal vapes are often fruit-flavoured and brightly coloured to make them more attractive to children. It is illegal to sell these products to under 18s but super-strength vapes pose another level of risk to all users.

They are unregulated and there is no way of knowing what other toxic substances they may contain. Environmental concerns were also highlighted around the waste battery aspect of the devices, millions of which are imported every year – mostly from China.

In total, 1,103 disposable vaping devices were removed from sale as they were either not labelled correctly in accordance with the TARP Regulations, did not contain sufficient CLP regulation information, had a capacity of over the legal limit of 2ml or had not been published or regulated by the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA). Councillor Neghat Khan, Portfolio Holder for Neighbourhoods, Safety and Inclusion at Nottingham City Council, said: “Trading Standards treat the sale of nicotine vaping products as a high priority, especially where children are concerned. The rapid expansion of this market for disposable nicotine devices is worrying and presents real risks to the environment and health, especially that of young people.”

Paul Dales, Chief Environmental Health Officer at Nottingham City Council, said: “Our officers found a wide range of non-compliant vaping devices, with both safety and health risks. While some people use vaping to quit smoking, there is a real risk that these products can attract young people into experimentation and addiction. The current craze with disposable, brightly-coloured and flavoured e-cigarettes can be child appealing and that is unacceptable.

“Parents may not realise their children are vaping these unsafe devices. They are attractively coloured and closely resemble highlighter pens or make-up products. They usually cost from £5 to £7 each.”
Good. :)

That could have been a lot worse, it's a pretty fair article.
 
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