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Feds seek to reduce nicotine in vaping products

Winnipeg Free Press By: The Canadian Press Last Modified: 4:07 PM CST Friday, Dec. 18, 2020 OTTAWA - The federal government says it wants to reduce the amount of nicotine allowed in vaping products as part of greater efforts to curb their appeal to young Canadians. A woman uses an electronic cigarette in Mayfield Heights, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 4, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Tony Dejak OTTAWA - The federal government says it wants to reduce the amount of nicotine allowed in vaping products as part of greater efforts to curb their appeal to young Canadians. Health Canada announced Friday it is proposing to lower the maximum nicotine concentration allowed for vaping products that are manufactured or imported for sale in Canada to 20 mg/ml. The current limit is 66 mg/ml, which would remain the maximum concentration allowed for any vaping products intended for export markets.

Legal cigarette sales up in Atlantic provinces following COVID border closure: study

HALIFAX A new study says legal cigarette sales in the Atlantic region have risen dramatically and the so-called Atlantic bubble erected to control COVID-19 may have helped dampen the illegal tobacco trade. An Ernst & Young report conducted for the Convenience Industry Council of Canada says while the sale of legal cigarettes rose over 20 per cent across Canada, the highest jump was felt in the Atlantic provinces. From June 2019 to June 2020, Prince Edward Island saw a 47 per cent increase in legal sales, while New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador both saw increases in legal cigarette sales of more than 44 per cent.

COVID Travel Restrictions May be Hampering Illegal Cigarette Trade in Atlantic Provinces According to Report

COVID Travel Restrictions May be Hampering Illegal Cigarette Trade in Atlantic Provinces According to Report
vocm.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vocm.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Legal cigarette sales up in Atlantic provinces following COVID border restrictions

  HALIFAX An association representing Canadian convenience stores say the border closure between Quebec and New Brunswick may have helped choke off the illegal tobacco trade in Atlantic Canada.   An Ernst & Young report conducted for the Convenience Industry Council of Canada says the so-called Atlantic bubble erected to limit the spread of COVID-19 could explain why legal cigarette sales jumped in the region. We ve always known (illegal sales were) a big problem in Ontario and Quebec, but I think what this really showed was you had another factor for Atlantic Canada, which was, essentially, the closure of the border, council president Anne Kothawala said in an interview Monday.

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