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Health

How Big Tobacco skirts Ottawa's ban on flavoured cigarettes

It was a prominent Stephen Harper campaign promise in 2008: Ottawa would ban candy-flavoured cigarettes that targeted young smokers. But shortly after the ban was enacted in 2010, tobacco companies found a way around it. Kelly Crowe explains what's happened since.

More than half of teenage smokers use flavoured tobacco products, new study says

Candy tobacco skirts regulation

10 years ago
Duration 2:49
A lot of teens continue to get their hands on tobacco products with fruity flavours

They look like Fruit Roll-ups, they smell like bubble gum, but they can kill like tobacco.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper discusses his proposed ban on tobacco products being marketed to children in Welland, Ont., at a campaign stop during the 2008 federal election. (The Canadian Press)

Watermelon-flavoured cigarillos, maple syrup cigars that smell like warm pancakes, skinny minty-flavoured cigarettes that look like a lipstick.

They are all part of the latest collection of starter tobacco products with obvious kid-friendly appeal. And they work.

Research shows these products are six times more popular with youth than with adults.

What's more, arecent study showed that more than half of tobacco users in Grades 9 through 12 smoke flavoured products, and theHealth Canada survey it was based on estimated that every month about 29,000 teenagers try one of these fruity or minty nicotine delivery devices for the first time.

That's a lot of kids getting their hands on a product that was supposedly banned four years ago by the federal government, after an election promise by Stephen Harper.

At a 2008 campaign stop in Welland, Ont., Harper held up a colourful box of candy flavoured tobacco sticks, and pointed a finger at the tobacco industry.

"Flavouring them and packaging them like candy, gum or Fruit Roll-ups, this is simply not right. It cannot continue,"he said.

But it has continued. To this very day, those flavoured tobacco products remain on store shelves across Canada. That's because, rather than a complete ban, Ottawa chose to target only products of a certain weight (1.4 grams or less) with a particular filter.

Without missing a beat, the companies quickly repackaged the products to be slightly heavier, and changed the filter. Presto, they were legal again, with one distributor boasting that rumours of a ban on flavoured cigars were greatly exaggerated.

What's more, in enacting its ban in 2010, Ottawa did not even attempt to do away with the most popular tobacco flavouring of all menthol. (The European Union has banned it and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is considering one.)

Studies show menthol is the most effective gateway nicotine product for beginner smokers, and that has been confirmed by the tobacco industry's own research as well as by independent scientists.

Harder to quit

Tobacco companies know menthol anaesthetizes the throat, reducing the initial discomfort and making those difficult first puffs much easier. Menthol also makes it harder to quit, though scientists aren't exactly sure why.

Now manufacturers are rolling menthol-infused tobacco into slender tubes and squeezing these into lipstick-sized packages, creating elegant cigarettes that scream "skinny" and appeal to weight conscious young women.

David Hammond, a tobacco researcher at the University of Waterloo, shows some of the candy-flavoured cigarillos that are still on the market. (CBC)

"The innovation is to design a tobacco product that appeals to the kids in the 21st century" says David Hammond, a tobacco researcher with the University of Waterloo's School of Public Health.

It's a good business plan, considering that 70 per cent of future smokers start before their 18th birthday.

And right now, one in ten Canadian kids is smoking, on their way to a lifelong habit that will kill one out of every two long-term users.

"Most people are surprised" at these numbers, Hammond says. "Tobacco feels like yesterday's issue."

Low profile gains

Tobacco smoking is rarely in the headlines anymore. Ottawa has cut funding to anti-smoking groups, and Statistics Canada has ended its long-running annual survey on tobacco use, instead consolidating tobacco research into a broader biennial survey that also looks at alcohol and drug use.

"So we'll now have less information, less detailed information on who's smoking and who's smoking what, and I think that's unfortunate," says Hammond.

But smoking is just as deadly as it ever was. A few weeks ago, the Canadian Cancer Society released its annual cancer statistics. They show that lung cancer is still the leading cause of cancer death in both men and women.

The report also identified tobacco as the single greatest avoidable risk factor for cancer.

Today, one out of every five Canadians continues to smoke around 5.8 million people a number that hasn't budged by much in almost a decade.

Tobacco control groups are growing increasingly concerned that efforts to reduce tobacco use have stalled.

Meanwhile, big tobacco never sleeps. Tobacco lobbyists actively visit federal politicians, monitoring any possible changes in tobacco regulations. And new products like e-cigarettes are springing up in the marketplace.

For the tobacco industry, the objective seems to be to recruit as many new smokers as possible before a fresh regulatory barrier slams into place.

They've had a four-year window since Ottawa claimed to be banning flavoured tobacco.

And while at least three provinces are working on their own bans, at this point there is still no law in effect in Canada to rid the shelves of tobacco in its attractive new cloak of many flavours.