"This week, Brazilian food and drug regulator AgĂȘncia Nacional de VigilĂąncia SanitĂĄria (ANVISA) opened a public consultation on vaping, finally inviting public comment after several years of promising to do so. Sales and imports of vaping products have been illegal in Brazil since 2009. The consultation, intended to gather technical and scientific information about vaping products, will remain open until May 11. Vaping consumers should take the opportunity to comment and oppose the countryâs current path of prohibition. Unfortunately, there isnât much chance the government will choose to roll back its vape ban and regulate Brazilâs large vaping market, according to Alexandro âHazardâ Lucian, founder of Brazilian vaping site Vapor Aqui. Lucian says the consultation process is geared toward maintaining the existing ban, and even strengthening it. ANVISAâs April 4 Regulatory Impact Analysis recommends that the current prohibition be maintained. Legalization and regulation were not even included as an option in the regulatory agencyâs report, according to Lucian. Despite the governmentâs antagonistic approach, Brazil has a large informal vaping market, as do many Latin American countries with vape bans on the books. âThe document shows 3 possible alternatives: keep things as they are, continue with the ban by adding tougher criteria, or free trade,â writes Lucian in Vapor Aqui (as translated by Google from the original Portuguese). âThe suggestion of this partial analysis is the second option, maintaining the ban, changing the text and also including the ban on the manufacture of these products, a detail that was missing in [the 2009 rule that banned vapes] and created a gap in the legislation.â The ANVISA report will be used as a guide by political leaders for deciding the immediate future of vaping in Brazil. It is possible decision makers will disregard the regulatory agencyâs suggestions, and instead seek to legalize sales of vaping productsâbut not likely. Unfortunately, the odds are that the government will maintain the existing ban, and strengthen it by closing the legal gap that currently allows domestic e-liquid manufacture. The same day ANVISA opened its public consultation, FIOCRUZâthe Brazilian health ministryâs science agencyâlaunched an anti-vaping campaign, according to Portal Rondonia. The campaign includes âan online petition encouraging people to demonstrate against the authorization of electronic cigarettes in the Brazilian market,â the news site says. Despite the governmentâs antagonistic approach, Brazil has a large informal vaping market, as do many Latin American countries with vape bans on the books. With a population of close to 215 million peopleâthe sixth largest country in the worldâenforcing such a ban is nearly impossible, especially when vaping is simply not a major public issue." (McDonald, 2022)
References:
Is Brazil serious about finally legalizing vapes? Vaping360. (n.d.). Retrieved April 14, 2022, from https://vaping360.com/vape-news/114352/is-brazil-serious-about-finally-legalizing-vapes/

