Tag: Australia

  • Politicians Urged to Debate Vaping in Australia

    Politicians Urged to Debate Vaping in Australia

    Photo: alexlmx

    The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) is urging Australian politicians to debate vaping in the runup the country’s federal election on May 21.

    According to the advocacy group, Australian politicians who recognize the public health potential of vaping will be rewarded with votes, “yet most remain too scared to promote the world’s most effective smoking cessation tool.”

    Nancy Loucas

    “Australia’s political leaders need to pull their heads out of the sand,” said Nancy Loucas, executive coordinator of CAPHRA. “Annually, over 20,000 Australian smokers die prematurely from smoking-related illnesses, and 2.3 million still smoke. Alarmingly, however, nobody wants to seriously fix successive governments’ failure to reduce tobacco harm.”

    Australia is the only Western democracy that requires a nicotine prescription to vape. Further, its Department of Health’s Draft National Smoking Strategy 2022–2030 proposes additional measures to prevent smokers from switching to safer nicotine products.

    Loucas suspects that tobacco tax revenues are one of the reasons that vaping has been buried in the election debate. Ongoing increases to tobacco excise have made it the fourth-largest individual tax collected by Australia’s federal government at an estimated $15 billion per financial year, according to CAPHRA.

    The group notes that nearly 70 countries have adopted regulatory frameworks on safer nicotine products. All of them have reported a dramatic decline in smoking prevalence since.

    “Australia is light-years behind the U.S., U.K. and New Zealand, with some key Asian countries now looking to lift their failed vaping bans. If campaigning Australian politicians really want to save lives this election, well here is their best opportunity by simply a stroke of the pen,” said Loucas. 

  • Australia Urged to Include Vaping in Smoking Strategy

    Australia Urged to Include Vaping in Smoking Strategy

    Photo: Zerophoto | Adobe Stock

    Australia is lagging well behind many other countries in the Asia-Pacific region when it comes to successfully tackling smoking through vaping, says the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA).  

    The CAPHRA’s observation comes as Australia’s Department of Health seeks feedback on its Draft National Smoking Strategy 2022–2030, with public submissions closing on March 24.

    “We encourage vapers and supporters of a progressive tobacco harm reduction (THR) approach to have their say. Australians desperate to quit smoking and those keen to stay off deadly cigarettes need all the help they can get,” says Nancy Loucas, executive coordinator of the CAPHRA.

    On Oct. 1, 2021, Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration expanded its prescription-only model with customs clamping down at the border on personal imports of nicotine vaping liquids from overseas websites.

    Not only does Australia’s draft strategy ignore the potential of safer nicotine products, it also lacks ambition, according to Loucas. The strategy aims for a smoking rate of 10 percent or less by 2025 while New Zealand is pursuing a 5 percent smoke-free goal and looks on target to achieve it. “Instead of banning vaping, New Zealand has regulated it, making it tough for minors to access but available to all adults keen to keep off the cancer sticks. New Zealand is seeing its overall smoking rate tumble, yet the Australian government fails to accept that the most effective smoking cessation tool available is staring it in the face,” says Loucas.

    “Australia is well down the world rankings when it comes to adopting effective THR policies and is light-years behind the U.S. and U.K. Subsequently, Australia’s overall smoking rate has fallen very little over the past decade, and without reasonable access to vaping, Australia will struggle to even achieve its 10 percent smoking goal,” says Loucas. 

  • Cigarette Smuggling up Dramatically in Australia

    Cigarette Smuggling up Dramatically in Australia

    Photo: Maxim

    The Australian Border Force (ABF) has detected a significant increase in attempted illicit tobacco imports at the Australian border, according to the Border Security Report.

    The ABF discovered 878.8 tons of undeclared loose-leaf tobacco and 712.7 million undeclared cigarette sticks between Jan. 1, 2021, and Dec. 31, 2021. This is a 45 percent increase compared to 2020.

    The majority of the illicit tobacco is coming from the Middle East and Asian regions. Illicit imports are either held for further investigation or incinerated.

    “Our detection numbers show we are very alert to the different methods and patterns of concealment used in illicit tobacco importations at our borders,” said Susan Drennan, commander of the agency’s Trade and Travel Operations East division. “Our message to those who think they can import such large amounts of illicit tobacco and get away with it is to think again.”

    Illicit tobacco imports that are linked to serious and organized crime syndicates are referred to the Illicit Tobacco Taskforce (ITTF). The ITTF combines the operational, investigative and intelligence capabilities of the ABF, the Australian Taxation Office, the Department of Home Affairs, the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission, AUSTRAC and the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions.

    “Organized crime groups capitalize on unwitting smokers looking for cheap cigarettes to enrich themselves and to fund other types of criminal activities that harm our community,” said Greg Linsdell, commander of the ABF Special Investigations division. “The ABF is working tirelessly to stop this activity both at our border and within Australia through comprehensive and powerful ITTF investigative actions.”