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Canada Relaunches Plan to Ban Most Vape Flavors


Canada is on the verge of banning most vape flavors and forcing manufacturers to reformulate existing allowed flavors using only a short list of ingredients approved by Health Canada. The new regulations were approved by the government almost three years ago, but have lain dormant since then.

Unlike most flavored vape bans that prohibit certain flavor descriptors or “characterizing flavors,” the proposed Health Canada rule will give manufacturers a list of under 100 allowable flavoring ingredients, and mandate that only they be used to create e-liquid—and only in tobacco, mint and menthol flavors.

Among flavorings not allowed are sweeteners of any kind. The regulatory agency said in 2021 it estimated 80-85 percent of existing products in the allowed flavor categories would have to be reformulated to meet the new requirements. Additionally, the regulations will “prescribe sensory attributes standards to prevent a sensory perception other than one that is typical of tobacco or mint/menthol.” In other words, manufacturers will be unable to, for example, add caramel to tobacco flavors, or fruit flavors to mint.

Five Canadian provinces and territories have already banned flavored vapes. Quebec began enforcing its flavor prohibition last October. New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, the Northwest Territories, and Prince Edward Island already had similar laws, and Nunavut has passed a ban but not yet set a date for implementation. 

However, even with all those flavor bans in place, over 70 percent of Canada’s population currently has access to flavors. Health Canada’s proposed rule will eliminate the most popular flavors across the entire country.

 

The phantom flavor rule 

On June 19, 2021, Health Canada published new regulations in the Canada Gazette, signifying the government’s intention to implement the flavor ban in six months, after the obligatory public consultation. Vape consumers and businesses steeled themselves for the biggest shakeup the Canadian vape market had yet seen.

Then something happened—or, rather, nothing happened. The flavor rule that had been set to launch in January 2022 never appeared, and all Health Canada mentions of a flavor ban—or the need for one—in documents and social media evaporated. As time passed, vapers began to breathe easier; maybe there would be no flavor ban.

In March 2023, even anti-vaping activist group Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada—major proponents of banning vape flavors—threw up its hands. The tobacco control hardliners published an article speculating that the flavor rule was finished. “It now seems prudent to conclude that the flavour ban has been left to die on the vine,” they lamented.

 

Health Minister Mark Holland: friend of prohibition 

Fast-forward a year and the flavor ban has returned from the dead, probably thanks to the efforts of one person: newly minted Health Minister Mark Holland. The minister has backing, of course, from the usual special interest tobacco control and medical groups that always oppose consumer nicotine products, including his former employer Heart & Stroke.

Holland worked at Heart & Stroke (formerly called the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada) between losing his House of Commons seat in 2011 and taking it back in 2015. Holland is a rising star in the majority Liberal Party, representing a riding (district) in Ajax, Ontario.

Since being named Minister of Health last summer, Holland has exhibited exactly the sort of anti-tobacco fervor you might expect from the former “national director of children and youth” at Heart & Stroke.

“I was with Heart & Stroke when we dealt with the issue of vaping,” Holland said at a recent press conference, “and there were many voices at that time, when information was uncertain, who said, ‘Let this exist as a cessation tool. Don’t take action.’ The result of that, unfortunately, was that the tobacco industry was able to addict a whole new cohort of young people—who had no exposure to nicotine—to something that’s absolutely deadly for their health. It has had very injurious outcomes for our health system.” 



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