23 January 2024

Ban disposable vapes - RSPCA

The RSPCA is the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Some countries around the world have been looking a vapes and their health implications to humans, and especially children.

In many the sale to under age kids is banned but we see more and more kids "smoking" these things as the flavours are very enticing to the developing mind.  "Candy Cane", "Strawberry & Cream" to name but two that I have seen kids using. They sound great.

The problem the RSPCA is trying to highlight is what happens to them after the have finished. They are often discarded in the streets and parks where they add to the litter and detritus the local authority has to clear up.

The RSPCA Campaign is to get disposable vapes banned. Not just for kids. For everyone.

If you live in the UK, you can get involved. Read the webpage and see if your MP will do something.

https://www.rspca.org.uk/getinvolved/campaign/vaping

I have done it and got a long winded letter back from my MP.

It's as follows:

"Good Afternoon,

Thank you for contacting me about vaping and the environment.

Regarding the event in Parliament about disposable vapes and wildlife and marine life on 6 February, I have put it in my diary.

I share your concerns about disposable e-cigarettes being littered in the streets of our towns and countryside. The scale of the waste of disposable vapes in the UK is shocking, with around five million disposable vapes thrown away every week. Many of the disposable vapes thrown away each week are not recycled properly and are instead littered or discarded with residual waste.

The Government recently carried out a public consultation on the Prime Minister’s proposals to create the first smokefree generation and crack down on cheap and accessible disposable vapes. The consultation included proposals to restrict child-friendly flavours and bright coloured packaging. These proposals will be of major benefit to the environment by tackling a particularly problematic waste stream. The consultation has now closed and I look forward to reading the Government's response in due course. 

Regarding the waste of vapes, I am aware that retailers that sell over £100,000 of electrical equipment per year are obliged to provide in-store takeback of electrical items, including vapes, under the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulations. Smaller businesses can choose to contribute funds to the distributor takeback scheme instead to ensure vapes are recycled correctly.

Under these regulations, producers of electrical and electronic equipment, including vapes, are required to take financial responsibility for the collection, and proper treatment the products that they place on the market when those products become waste at household waste recycling centres or are returned to retailers. Consumers that wish to dispose of their old vapes can take them to their local authority household waste recycling centre. I am informed that all vapes that are deposited at household waste and recycling centres will be collected and treated.

Finally, while I understand that the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs does not currently hold information on the potential risks to animals from exposure to disposable vapes, I know that it has commissioned research which will better understand both the market for, and impacts of, disposable vapes and associated cost inputs. I will continue to follow this issue closely.

Thank you again for taking the time to contact me.

Kind regards,
 
Damian Collins OBE MP
Member of Parliament for Folkestone and Hythe"


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