Disposable vape ban begins but will teens quit?
It means shops and supermarkets will no longer be able to stock them - but they can still sell rechargeable or refillable devices.
Disposable vapes have been cited as a key driver in the rise in youth vaping, while every year five million vapes are thrown away.
Ministers predict it will have a significant impact but health experts say further regulation is needed to tackle youth vaping.
Why are disposable vapes being banned and how harmful is vaping?
'I don't know what we'll do' - Vapers panic-buy ahead of disposables ban
Disposable vapes ban unlikely to reduce appeal, says campaigner
Retailers in England and Wales breaching the ban face a £200 fine for the first offence with potentially unlimited fines or jail for those who repeatedly re-offend.
The ban was first announced for England and Wales by the previous Conservative government but the law was not enacted before last summer's general election.
Labour then pushed ahead with it.
Scotland and Northern Ireland have introduced their own bans, timed to coincide with the one in England and Wales.
Vape use has risen rapidly over the last decade with 9% of the British public now buying and using e-cigarettes.
Latest figures suggest about one in four vapers use the disposable versions, although that proportion has fallen since the ban was announced.
And while it is illegal to sell vapes to anyone under 18, disposable vapes, often sold in smaller, more colourful packaging than refillable ones, have been cited as an important factor in the rise of youth vaping.
Currently one in seven 18 to 24-year-olds vape but have never smoked.
Vaping is substantially less harmful than smoking but it has not been around for long enough for its long-term risks to be known, according to the NHS.
The environmental impact is considerable. Single-use vapes are difficult to recycle and typically end up in landfill where their batteries can leak harmful chemicals like battery acid, lithium, and mercury into the environment, the government said.
Batteries thrown into household waste also cause hundreds of fires in bin lorries and waste-processing centres every year.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs estimates almost five million single-use vapes were either littered or thrown into general waste each week last year.
Environment minister Mary Creagh said: "For too long, single-use vapes have blighted our streets as litter and hooked our children on nicotine. That ends today.
"The government calls time on these nasty devices."
But Action on Smoking and Health chief executive Hazel Cheeseman questioned what impact the ban would have, pointing out new refillable vape kits were coming on to the market that look and cost similar to the single-use ones.
She said it would not be until the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which includes powers to regulate marketing, branding and advertising, came into power that the issue of youth vaping could be truly tackled.
"Their appeal is driven by bright colours, wide availability and cheap prices," she said.
"The new regulations will hopefully help to address the environmental impact, but government will need further regulations to address the appeal of products to teenagers."
She said this was very much a balancing act as vapes were an important tool to help people quit.
"Vaping is very much less harmful than smoking and is the most popular aid to quitting in the UK," she added.
John Dunne, of the UK Vaping Industry Association, said bans were "not the answer".
He said he was concerned that a black market in single-use vapes could develop and some people may be tempted to return to smoking cigarettes.
"Disposables have played a huge role in reducing smoking levels amongst adults to record low levels. It's why we are seeing stockpiling in the lead up to the ban," he added.
Scott Butler, executive director of Material Focus, an independent not-for-profit organisation, said that he was still concerned that vapes are still difficult to recycle and reuse.
He said customers and businesses should demand sustainable options.
"Given the rampant binning and littering that we already see, will we see any behaviour change? Only if producers, importers and retailers step up and meet their long existing legal obligations to provide and pay for takeback and recycling," he said.
Help young vapers and don't judge, consultant says
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
2 minutes ago
- Fox News
Trained dogs can smell Parkinson's disease before symptoms show up, study finds
Man's best friend could provide more than just companionship. In a new study from the University of Bristol, dogs were found to detect Parkinson's disease well before symptoms appear. Previous research has shown that people with Parkinson's have increased amounts of sebum — an oily, waxy substance with a distinctively musky odor — on the skin. In the new study, two dogs that had been trained on more than 200 odor samples were presented with skin swabs from 130 people with Parkinson's and 175 people without the disease, according to a press release. The dogs — a golden retriever named Bumper and a black labrador named Peanut — were rewarded for positively identifying Parkinson's samples and for ignoring negative ones. The dogs showed sensitivity of up to 80% — which means they identified people who had the disease 80% of the time. They achieved specificity of up to 98%, which is how good they were at ruling out people who did not have Parkinson's. "The dogs … showed there is an olfactory signature distinct to patients with the disease." The University of Bristol collaborated with Medical Detection Dogs and the University of Manchester on the study, which was published in The Journal of Parkinson's Disease on July 15. While there is no early screening available for Parkinson's, some early warning signs can appear years or even decades before diagnosis, according to experts. "Identifying diagnostic biomarkers of PD, particularly those that may predict development or help diagnose disease earlier, is the subject of much ongoing research," said lead study author Nicola Rooney, associate professor at Bristol Veterinary School at the University of Bristol, in the release. "The dogs in this study achieved high sensitivity and specificity and showed there is an olfactory signature distinct to patients with the disease," she went on. "Sensitivity levels of 70% and 80% are well above chance, and I believe that dogs could help us to develop a quick, non-invasive and cost-effective method to identify patients with Parkinson's disease." Claire Guest, chief scientific officer at Medical Detection Dogs in the U.K., reiterated that the study confirmed dogs can "very accurately" detect disease. "Timely diagnosis is key, as subsequent treatment could slow down the progression of the disease and reduce the intensity of symptoms," she said in the release. Perdita Barran, professor of mass spectrometry at The University of Manchester, said the study "adds to the growing body of evidence showing that simple, non-invasive skin swabs can be used to diagnose Parkinson's disease, offering a faster and more accessible method for early detection." For more Health articles, visit Looking ahead, the team plans to conduct longer-term studies to assess dogs' capacity to detect Parkinson's before diagnosis. The Michael J. Fox Foundation and Parkinson's UK provided funding for this study.
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Paul Gascoigne 'back home and doing well' after hospital visit, representative says
LONDON (AP) — Former England midfielder Paul Gascoigne is back home and 'doing well' after being hospitalized over the weekend, his representative said Monday. 'Paul voluntarily went into A&E on Friday after struggling with a throat condition he has had for a while,' Carly Saward at The MNT talent agency told The Associated Press in an email. 'He is already back home and doing well.' British newspaper The Sun reported that the 58-year-old Gascoigne had been found 'semi-conscious' at home by a friend on Friday in Poole in south England and initially been admitted to an intensive care unit. Gascoigne helped lead England to the semifinals at the 1990 World Cup and 1996 European Championship and was widely considered one of the most naturally talented players of his generation. But he has battled alcohol addiction for decades and has also had other health problems in recent years. ___ AP soccer:
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
When will Donald Trump next visit the UK?
Donald Trump will visit Scotland next week, the White House has confirmed, ahead of a separate state visit to the UK in just under two month's time. His trip will require a huge policing operation, particularly given that some protesters have said they plan to turn out to make the US president less than welcome. It will be the first time Trump has visited the country since 2023, when he and his son Eric played a new 18-hole course at his Trump International golf resort in Aberdeenshire. Speculation had been mounting about a potential visit by the president when Police Scotland confirmed it was in the early stages of planning for such an event. Here's what we know about Trump's travel plans so far. When does Trump arrive in Scotland? Confirming the president's visit at a briefing on Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump would arrive in Scotland on Friday. He will visit both of his golf courses in the country – Turnberry in Ayrshire and Menie in Aberdeenshire – between 25-29 of July, she told reporters. It has already been confirmed that Trump will meet with prime minister Sir Keir Starmer while in Aberdeen. 'During the visit, president Trump will meet again with prime minister Starmer to refine the great trade deal that was brokered between the United States and the United Kingdom,' said Leavitt. The Scottish government said plans were also being put in place for the president to meet first minister John Swinney. Last week Swinney said it is in "Scotland's interest" for him to meet Trump, adding that he had an "obligation" to "protect and promote" the country, adding that he would use the meeting to discuss tariffs, Gaza and Ukraine. There had also been speculation the King would host Trump in Scotland at Balmoral or Dumfries House, after Charles wrote a letter to him in February inviting him to a state visit. However, it is understood with the state visit not long after the proposed meeting both sides decided to wait until the formal gathering. Are there any Trump protests? Pro-Palestinian protesters, climate activists and trade unions have teamed up to form a "Stop Trump Coalition" ahead of the president's visit. The group is planning on getting as close to Trump's Aberdeenshire golf course as possible and drawing a huge insulting message on the beach outside, according to the Sunday Times. 'We anticipate he will be flying in, possibly on a helicopter. We'll make sure from the air that he will see our presence," trade unionist Tommy Campbell told the newspaper. 'We want to make sure that there's no red carpet laid out for him when he comes to Scotland... I can't take away the fact that his mother is Scottish. But he's certainly not Scottish.' Campbell said the group is confident it will attract hundreds of protesters and is "aiming for more", which is likely to put pressure on an already under resourced Police Scotland. The Scottish Police Federation, which represents 98% of Police Scotland officers, is reportedly seeking legal advice about the president's visit over concerns the force does not have capacity to manage the event. General secretary David Kennedy told STV: "We do not have enough police officers in Scotland. Anyone that says we do, I don't know where they get those figures from." What has Trump said about the UK recently? The so-called "special relationship" between the UK and the US is arguably often overstated, but Starmer has been working to strengthen ties with his American counterpart since entering office. During the G7 summit in Canada last month, the two leaders hammered out the outline of a trade agreement that would see tariffs on British cars and slashed from 25% to 10% and a removal of tariffs on aerospace goods. Speaking at the meeting of world leaders, Trump said: 'The UK is very well protected, you know why? Because I like them. That's their ultimate protection.' Praising Starmer for his leadership in an interview with the BBC in January, Trump described the prime minister as a "very good guy". "I may not agree with his philosophy, but I have a very good relationship with him," he added. Last week Trump waded into British energy policy, telling the BBC that the north-east of Scotland – the oil and gas capital of Europe – should 'get rid of the windmills and bring back the oil'. There has also been some tension between the UK and key figures of the Trump administration, however, with vice president JD Vance claiming in February that free speech in the country was "in retreat". Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, he also said Brexit voters had been betrayed by elites opening 'the floodgates to millions of unvetted immigrants', the Telegraph reported. When is Trump's historic state visit? The president will return to the UK between 17 and 19 September for an unprecedented second state visit. Other world leaders have visited Britain multiple times, but Trump will be the first elected leader in modern history to be invited for two state visits, following his first in 2019. Some, including Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, called for the trip to be rescheduled so Trump would visit while Parliament was sitting, giving the president a chance to make a speech to the Houses. However, earlier this month, Trump told the BBC he didn't want MPs to be forced to return on his account, telling the broadcaster: "I think let them go and have a good time." He said his plans for th visit were to "have a good time and respect King Charles, because he's a great gentleman". The full details of the visit have not yet been released, but it will include a full ceremonial welcome and a state banquet at St George's Hall in Windsor Castle. Meanwhile, anti-Trump campaigners have said they plan to stage a mass demonstration in central London on the first day of his trip. Read more Scots police federation consider legal action over planning for Donald Trump visit (The Daily Record) New US Visa fee is introduced - are holidaymakers from the UK impacted? (The London Standard) Protesters warn JD Vance 'resistance will be waiting' as he prepares for Cotswolds family holiday (The Independent)