French Government Banning Most Outdoor Smoking

Starting on July 1, it will be illegal to smoke in most outdoor public spaces in . The new, sweeping ban is taking aim at primary points of congregation in outdoor spaces, namely beaches, parks, sports facilities, bus stops, gardens and areas close to schools. While the legislation is targeted at young people and limiting their exposure to tobacco and nicotine products, e-cigarettes are not included as part of the ban and smoking on ’s famed café terraces will remain legal.
“Where there are children, tobacco must disappear,” said Health Minister Catherine Vautrin in an interview with Ouest-, who said that she hopes to “denormalize tobacco” for young people, and seeks to achieve this aim by implementing a 135 euro (roughly $154) fine for smoking in the targeted public areas. The move comes during a time in which smoking levels have drastically decreased in . According to The French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (OFDT), tobacco sales in dropped more than 11.5 percent last year.
As part of these new tobacco control measures, it appears that the French government is also aiming to restrict nicotine levels in tobacco and vaping products and introduce strict limits on vape flavors. These plans are said to go into effect roughly one year from now, but the actual makeup of the restrictions remains unclear. Health Minister Vautrin says the government needs “scientific and technical opinions to establish the details.” As of now, it's unsure how cigars will be impacted in this regard, if at all.
While the new ban is an official, nationwide decree, many local municipalities have already banned smoking in certain public spaces, especially at beaches. But the move at the national level represents a more formal anti-tobacco stance from the French government. A potential generational tobacco ban could loom ahead, which Vautrin didn’t rule out in her interview. While such a move may seem like a giant leap from banning smoking in public spaces where children tend to gather there are reasons to believe it could take place.
The U.K., for example, is in the midst of ing the elsewhere in the United States have begun proposing, and implementing, their own generational bans.
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