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A Small Policy Change Could Transform the U.S. Vaping Industry

U.S. Food and Drug Administration has the ability to regulate e-cigarettes containing synthetic nicotine. This shift could help reduce the availability of vaping products within the U.S.

A spending bill, which Congress passed on March 10 and President Joe Biden is expected to sign on March 11, expanded the definition of an FDA-regulated “tobacco product” to include those that use lab-made nicotine, as well as traditional tobacco-derived nicotine. That update—while small on paper—could dramatically change the U.S. vaping industry, potentially taking market-leaders like Puff Bar, as well as products from smaller brands, off store shelves.
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According to a 2016 FDA policy, e-cigarettes can’t be sold in the United States unless the makers show that the products are more beneficial than harmful to public health. It often boils down to whether they offer adults the chance to quit smoking or if there are health risks.

E-cigarettes introduced before the FDA’s rule was enacted had to retroactively file applications by September 2020. The agency was supposed to decide which brands met its public-health standard by September 2021, but—six months later—it still has not reached decisions for big-name brands including Juul. In October, R.J. Reynolds’ Vuse Solo became the first e-cigarette to clear the FDA’s process.

Up to now, the FDA has not reviewed applications for over 5 million vaping devices. Rather than taking their products off the market, some of those companies—many of which were smaller operations making e-liquids for refillable vaping devices—used synthetic nicotine as a lifeline, replacing traditional nicotine with the lab-made version to stay outside FDA regulation. This loophole has been closed, so many products can no longer be sold.

Puff Bar is a well-known brand of disposable electronic cigarettes and could also be one of the most affected. The FDA ordered it to stop selling its vapes in 2020, since it did not follow the agency’s application process. Later, it reemerged using a formula that used synthetic nicotine and became the favorite brand for 26% vapers in high school. With synthetic nicotine no longer a viable workaround, the company’s fate is once again uncertain.

In the polarized world of e-cigarettes, reactions to the FDA’s new power have been predictably split.

Some in the vaping industry slammed the FDA for shrinking the number of cigarette-alternatives available in the U.S. “This bill ought to be called the Cigarette Protection Act, because the indisputable outcome will be countless more Americans pushed away from nicotine vaping and back into combustible smoking,” Amanda Wheeler, president of the American Vapor Manufacturers Association, told Filter.

But large e-cigarette companies, including Juul, support the regulation of brands making synthetic nicotine products—some of which are among Juul’s biggest competitors. In a previous statement, a Juul spokesperson said that “illegally marketed and illicit products and products designed to evade federal and state oversight undermine harm reduction and a responsible e-vapor category.”

Juul is in uncommon agreement with public-health agencies on this point. The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids applauded Congress for taking steps to curb youth vaping—a habit 11% of high school students reported in 2021, down from a high of 27.5% in 2019.

“By stopping manufacturers from using synthetic nicotine to evade FDA regulation, Congress is taking a critical step to end this youth addiction crisis once and for all,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

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