Wellness & Healthy Living

New Zealand enacts world-first generational ban on tobacco

If you're under the age of 14 on New Year's day, you'll become part of a "smokefree generation" that will never legally be able to buy tobacco in New Zealand
If you're under the age of 14 on New Year's day, you'll become part of a "smokefree generation" that will never legally be able to buy tobacco in New Zealand

In a world first, the New Zealand government has passed laws that will permanently outlaw the sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products to anyone born after 2008, creating a "smokefree generation" that will never legally be able to buy tobacco.

The Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products (Smoked Tobacco) Amendment Bill makes some major changes to New Zealand's tobacco legislation. Firstly, it comes into force at the beginning of 2023, and immediately restricts the nicotine content of all smoked tobacco products to a "non-addictive" level of 0.8 mg per gram of tobacco – about 20 times less than the "normal nicotine cigarettes" level of 15.8 mg/g described in this 2019 study.

Secondly, it gives regulators 12 months to eliminate 90% of the country's licensed tobacco retailers, leaving only 600 points of sale in the country by the end of 2023.

But most notably, it also creates a rolling age limit for smokers that will prevent anyone under the age of 14 on New Year's Day from ever being able to buy tobacco legally on NZ soil. Anyone who sells, delivers, or even arranges for the delivery of smoked tobacco products to this "smokefree generation" faces fines up to NZ$150,000 (US$96,700). Even giving a cigarette to somebody in this group in public becomes an offense with fines up to NZ$50,000 (US$32,200).

New Zealand's national smoking rate has already halved in the last 10 years, down to 8% – less than half of a global smoking rate around 22.3%. According to the World Health Organisation, tobacco is "one of the biggest public health threats the world has ever faced." It eventually kills up to half the people that use it, at a rate over 7 million people annually – and it kills another 1.2 million non-smokers a year, simply through exposure to second-hand smoke. Smoking rates have dropped in most high-income countries to the point where more than 80% of global smokers now live in low- and middle-income countries.

“This legislation accelerates progress towards a smokefree future,” said NZ Associate Health Minister Dr Ayesha Verrall in a press statement. “Thousands of people will live longer, healthier lives and the health system will be $5 billion better off from not needing to treat the illnesses caused by smoking, such as numerous types of cancer, heart attacks, strokes, amputations ... We’ve done well as a country to get to this point, but there is more to do."

Source: New Zealand Government

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12 comments
JimFox
A year ago I emailed the Australian Minister for Health laying out the case for banning tobacco; basically that the cost outweighs the tax revenues by a factor of approx 10 to 1. 138 billion dollars in 2019,I think.

Response was that Parliament would debate the matter & I'd be informed on the outcome.
True to form I heard NOTHING from the Morrison Government, likely because they could not rebut the facts. It would "Ruin the weekend" apparently.
pbethel
New black market for criminals to exploit and profit from.
Cryptonoetic
And how well did outlawing marijuana work? Or is it, this time, government actually will, in every instance, prosecute and heavily fine (and, I guarantee, eventually incarcerate) everybody caught using tobacco? Guess what. Everybody dies, 95% of the time due to lifestyle habits the Karens spurn. Wake Up! This is gateway legislation. Hope the Kiwis realize that it won't be long before their "government" legislates what and how much they can eat, what and how much they can drive, and eventually what and how much they can own.
michael_dowling
pbethel : Yes,couldn't agree more. People still can't grasp the simple truth. If you make it illegal,someone will pop up to supply it,as seen with illegal hard drugs.
Rick O
I don't smoke, aside from the occasional cigar (maybe once a year). I think it's a bad habit, bad for your health, bad for your wallet, and bad for your image. But it should also be your choice, and not outright banned. IMO, there should be laws against adding things to make it more addictive. There should be nothing but tobacco and natural flavorings. And then also, keep/expand existing laws (in the US) to protect non smokers in public areas, and children in the home/car. Outright bans on anything that grows in nature are never okay in my opinion. Regulate, don't strangulate.
mark34
Maybe alcohol could be next? Reduce impaired driving , family misery, and stupid decisions (when did I this tatoo?)
joe46
well...this will be great for the gangs here, it will expand their existing black markets :(
ljaques
Banning smoking while unbanning vaping is likely to give them a net zero change in costs.
christopher
Kids smoke for a REASON, and if they can't smoke anymore, that original REASON is still going to look for an outlet. I bet they didn't bother to research the dangers of whatever will take the place of that smoking. I bet they didn't even research what the police currently do when encountering anyone breaking drug laws, or when encountering any young people breaking any laws (which is, in a nutshell, absolutely nothing).
Eggbones
I started smoking when I was 13 and have struggled with it for the 47 years since. I am 100% in favour of what NZ is doing - I wish I'd never smoked a single cigarette.