Minister for Health implements measures to protect children from tobacco and e-cigarettes
The new provisions will ban the sale of tobacco products or nicotine inhaling products at events aimed at children
11 April 2024
The Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly has commenced further sections of the Public Health (Tobacco Products and Nicotine Inhaling Products) Act 2023 to strengthen the protection of children from tobacco products and nicotine inhaling products such as e-cigarettes or vapes.
Provisions commenced will:
- Ban the sale of tobacco products or nicotine inhaling products at events aimed at children.
- Prohibit advertising for nicotine inhaling products around cinema films for children, on public service vehicles and at stops or stations and within 200 metres of a school.
There is a six-month lead-in time for these measures which will take effect from 23 September 2024.
A further provision has come into effect when test purchasing operations carried out by the National Environmental Health Service of the Health Service Executive (HSE) on tobacco products and nicotine inhaling products will be underpinned by law.
Test purchasing operations involve a minor aged 15 or over attempting to purchase tobacco products in contravention of the ban on sales to minors. These operations were previously approved by the High Court for tobacco and from Thursday, they will be contained in legislation for both tobacco and nicotine inhaling products. This coincides with the 20th anniversary of the introduction of the smoking ban in workplaces in Ireland.
It follows the commencement in December of Section 28 of the Act which made it an offence to sell a nicotine inhaling product to a child.
Minister Donnelly said: “The commencement will bring into operation further elements of our overall strategy to reduce the exposure of our children to smoking and vaping. I am particularly pleased to commence the statutory framework for test purchases as it highlights how some of our young people themselves are helping to protect other young people from tobacco and nicotine inhaling products.
“As we mark 20 years since the introduction of the smoking ban in Ireland, my Department continues to introduce evidence-based policy measures that help to reduce the significant health burden that smoking places on our population.
“Second-hand smoke causes cancers, heart disease and strokes, and young people who vape are more likely to go on to smoke, so it is vital that we initiate measures to protect them from addictive products.”
The Minister Hildegarde Naughton said: “The recent public consultation on the further regulation of vapes and tobacco will help to inform future regulation, with the aim of protecting the health of our population, and in particular, our young people.”
Read more: Ban on sale of vapes to under-18s comes into force on Friday, 22 December
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