Young person vaping with lots of smoke around their face
Image: nery zarate under CC BY 2.0

1,000 illegal vapes seized amid underage sales concerns in Isle of Wight council crackdown

A thousand ‘unsafe’ vapes have been seized and warnings issued for underage vape selling on the Isle of Wight.

Acting on intelligence, the Isle of Wight council has taken enforcement action against local businesses selling vapes to underage children, as well as selling illegal vapes.

UK legislation
In the UK, there is legislation which restricts the size of vapes and refill containers; the strength of nicotine in the liquid; bans certain ingredients or colourings and requires labels and warnings on packaging.

After being told about ‘alleged, non-compliant’ vapes, predominantly relating to oversized tanks and or poor labelling, a council spokesperson said, ‘unsafe’ vapes were seized from businesses by Trading Standards officers, and written warnings issued.

Around 1,000 vapes seized
So far this year, the council has seized around 1,000 vapes which were voluntarily surrendered for destruction.

The authority has also carried out underage test-purchasing exercises, where volunteers are used to make sure businesses are compliant with legislation.

The legal age for vaping, buying vape juice or any related product in the UK is 18. It is also illegal for adults to buy products for anyone under 18.

Enforcement action
A council spokesperson said the authority has found some failures this year, where businesses have failed to pass the underage tests, and resulted in written warnings and follow-up tests.

If further failure is identified the council will consider further enforcement action, it confirmed.

Isle of Wight Festival
One seller, who failed an underage test, was on the street outside the Isle of Wight Festival and given a written warning.

The council carried out tests inside the Isle of Wight Festival, working with Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary, and found it was compliant with regulations.


This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed