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  • Vaping is everywhere. Here on the busy streets of London,

  • you often encounter a cloud of sweet-smelling vapor or an abandoned e-cigarette on the floor.

  • But the industry is undergoing major change as governments look to restrict the sale of

  • disposable vapes amid concerns about  the rise in vaping among young people

  • and non-smokers getting addicted.

  • As of October 2023, 28 countries have banned the sale of any type of e-cigarettes.

  • In addition, the U.K., Germany, France, Ireland

  • and Belgium, are among the countries looking into how they can ban disposable, or one-use vapes,

  • as they continue to grow in popularity.

  • So, what does the rise in vaping mean for

  • the tobacco industry, and is the hysteria  over their impacts well-justified?

  • The vaping industry has exploded over  the last decade, as health bodies have

  • promoted it as an aid to quit smoking while  cigarettes continue to fall out of fashion.

  • In the U.K., we have encouraged vaping among people who are struggling to stop smoking,

  • and the use of e-cigarettes among those people has gone up over the years,

  • things like nicotine patches, gums, lozenges, and some drugs as well. You don't get that same

  • hit as you would with smoking a cigarette. Whereas with e-cigarettes, you do feel that

  • nicotine hit. So, it's a lot more similar to  the experience of smoking. And as well as that,

  • you get the more social experience of  going out and doing it with someone.

  • And with interest, comes innovation.

  • The first known design of a vape was actually

  • created almost 100 years ago in New York, but the technology wasn't made until much later, in 1963.

  • Two designs preceded the vapes we know today. The first looked like a cigarette,

  • with a glowing light at the end, and the  second was a much larger, metallic device.

  • Many of today's designs are much  sleeker and look more like a piece

  • of tech than an aid to stop smoking.

  • So this is actually one of our present-day

  • devices. The battery itself is a little  bit bigger. Yes, it's a metallic, nice,

  • finished design, you get a screen on the front here to be able to tell people how much battery

  • life is left. Because all these elements, if  you're not a vaper, you're sort of thinking,

  • that feels a little bit sophisticated. When  you've made the transition across from cigarettes,

  • battery life, you don't want to be out and  suddenly find that your e-cigarette may fail

  • on you. Because if you imagine when people have  started on a single-use product, it's a very

  • simple device, you don't need to fill a productYou just take a sticker off, take a sticker off,

  • you go, and then hopefully dispose of it  responsibly, not into household waste.

  • Hoping to capitalize on  this fast-growing industry,

  • big tobacco companies waded into the market.

  • British American Tobacco was the first to move

  • into the space, when it acquired  start-up CN Creative in 2012.

  • Imperial then acquired  e-cigarette brand Blu in 2014.

  • Philip Morris bought UK e-cigarette  company Nicocigs the same year.

  • And Japan Tobacco Incorporation  bought E-lites in 2015.

  • The old cigarette model in terms of volume declines was becoming much more pressured.

  • There were increasing examples of countries  outlining tobacco endgame policies within the

  • next 10 to 20 years. There was increasing ESG  overhang from investors and how the investment

  • community viewed cigarettes and we started to see  these products appear on the market from non-big

  • tobacco and take share from cigarettes, so, they  were a competitive threat for the first time.

  • The number of adults using e-cigarettes rose to  9.1% of the U.K. population in 2022, which is the

  • highest ever, up from just 2.7% 10 years ago.

  • Meanwhile, the number of smokers has dropped

  • year on year, and fell to 12.9% of the population  in 2022, the lowest since records began in 2011.

  • And those figures are translating into big  profits. British American Tobacco saw revenue

  • from its vapor products increase by 40.3% in 2023 compared to 2022, so it's unsurprising that

  • big tobacco is pivoting towards vaping.

  • But the huge growth in the legal vape

  • market is just one side of this  story. In the last ten years,

  • illegal vapes have generated big sums of cash.

  • The market is worth between three and four billion.

  • You could estimate, and intelligence  would suggest, that the illicit market could be

  • as much as two thirds of that. So you've got a double issue,

  • you've got unregulated products to a vast degree  in the market, and actually, then youths accessing

  • the product because those retailers prepared to  stop those products are not doing the necessary

  • age verification. So, a really big issue.

  • And there are some key giveaways when it comes to spotting illegal products.

  • A bigger puff device is certainly wider,

  • and certainly taller, normally quite squareSo actually, if you see that as a consumer

  • in a shop, anything over 600. You won't find any  reputable manufacturer using cartoon characters,

  • or flavor names that are associated with drinks  or food because there's already legislation.

  • That should give you those warning signs.

  • Not only are illegal vapes taking a big

  • slice of the vaping industry, but they're  also putting users in serious danger.

  • We saw in the U.S. a string of deaths and  hospitalizations, which seemingly were

  • linked to vaping. And that caused 60 deaths and  hundreds of hospitalizations with this lung issue,

  • which they eventually called EVALI. What  we found out eventually was that this

  • illness was being caused by people who were  trying to vape THC. And to do that they were

  • adding something called vitamin E acetate. And  this vitamin E acetate is banned in the U.K.

  • In the U.K., we've seen banned heavy metals in  products that have been confiscated in schools.

  • We've also heard reports of spice being added  to vapes and children coming across these. So,

  • being exposed to drugs which they were not  expecting to be exposing themselves to.

  • So, it's a very, very risky landscape at the  moment for young people who are vaping.

  • And as with most quick-moving marketsregulations will always struggle to

  • keep up with innovation. Big tobacco firmsincluding British American Tobacco for example,

  • are selling heat sticks made from nicotine-infused  substances such as rooibos tea, which circumvent

  • the EU ban of flavored-heated tobacco.

  • The influx of all the flavors in these

  • cheap disposable brands from China over the  last few years, from a big tobacco perspective,

  • it's actually a positive because this will  encourage regulators now to take action against

  • these products. It is going to be a positive from  a big tobacco perspective, because it leads to

  • that consolidation, it also creates barriers  to entry going forward, so you won't see more

  • and more products coming in from China.

  • Meanwhile, smokers are still actively

  • being encouraged to take up vaping to  quit cigarettes. The British National

  • Health Service for example says it poses  a small fraction of the risk of smoking,

  • which causes around seven out of every ten cases  of lung cancer. But health professionals also

  • highlight that vaping is not completely risk-freeand the longer-term risks are not yet known.

  • We're fairly certain that vaping will be less  harmful for you in the long run than smoking

  • will be because it's got fewer harmful chemicals  intoxicants in there. The issue is, if you're

  • taking in those harmful chemicals intoxicants, and  you wouldn't have been exposed to those otherwise,

  • you're then increasing your harm. So, we  have cigarettes at the top as the most

  • risky thing you can do. Then there's e-cigarettes  underneath that, but the least or least harmful

  • thing or the safest thing you can do is neither.

  • Yes, we are seeing increasing youth prevalence,

  • but I think you need to put that one in context  of other vices or over categories like cannabis

  • and alcohol. But at the same time, we're seeing  increased youth usage, youth cigarette smoking

  • is lower than it's ever been both in the U.S.  in the U.K., which would suggest that if these

  • youths were not using vape, which is much safer  than cigarettes, they would otherwise be smoking.

  • In the U.K., e-cigarette usage is highest  among people aged between 16 and 24 while

  • one in nine children had experimented with  vaping in March 2023, which is up from one in

  • thirteen in the same month in 2022.

  • So as a fast-growing industry, both legally and on the black marketit looks like vaping is here to stay.  

  • I think we've got to around the level at which  it will be at its most popular, but how long it

  • takes for it to decrease in popularity, againis yet to be seen. And it's difficult to really

  • think about how long a fad can last. Until they  become less trendy, it's going to be a really,

  • really uphill drive for us to try and reduce the  youth use without having a reduce in the trend.

  • If you look at the growth curve over the last two  years, that has been that demonstrable increase.

  • That is great, because, in many ways, people  weren't sure what it was about, what are these products?

  • Are they the solution or are they the issue?

  • Well, actually, hopefully, it's been proven now.

Vaping is everywhere. Here on the busy streets of London,

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