Ban Single-Use Vapes and Restrict Children's Vaping
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Ban Single-Use Vapes and Restrict Children's Vaping” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Personal liberty & free speech — Hurts
minor · moderate confidence
Banning single-use vapes removes a legal product choice from adults, restricting their bodily autonomy and consumer freedom — even though they can still buy reusable alternatives. Additional rules banning vaping in cars with under-18s extend state reach into private behaviour.
The evidence
- The policy bans the sale of single-use vapes outright and introduces regulations restricting vaping by children. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “banning the sale of single-use vapes”
- The ban on single-use vapes came into legal effect across all four UK nations on 1 June 2025. — eunomia.eco (media) — “The ban on the sale and supply of single-use vapes across England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales came into effect on June 1, 2025”
- The broader bill also includes on-the-spot fines for retailers selling to underage customers. — healthmedia.blog.gov.uk (government) — “quicker and simpler £100 on-the-spot fines for shops selling tobacco and vapes underage”
- New regulations ban vaping in cars carrying anyone under 18 and in outdoor public spaces near schools and hospitals. — theguardian.com (media) — “new regulations will ban vaping in cars carrying anyone under 18, and outlaw smoking, vaping, and using heated tobacco in playgrounds and outside schools and hospitals”
- Up to 2.7 million UK ex-smokers use vapes for cessation or relapse prevention, and their ability to use a preferred product format is disrupted by the ban. — rstreet.org (media) — “the harm-reduction strategies of up to 2.7 million UK ex-smokers relying on vapes could be disrupted”
- Reusable vape sales rose after the ban (2ml devices up 11%, pod systems up 21%), suggesting an alternative does exist for many adults. — servelegal.co.uk (media) — “Sales of smaller 2ml reusable vapes rose by 11%, and pod systems saw a 21% increase”
Biggest unknown: Whether the shift to reusable vapes is practically accessible for all adult users (especially those with physical or mental health challenges) determines how coercive the product ban feels in practice.
Our reading: O10 scores liberty effects, not health outcomes. The key question is: does this policy expand or contract what adults are free to do with their own bodies and purchases? The single-use vape ban is a product prohibition that removes a legal consumer choice from adults. Adults may still vape using reusable devices, so the activity is not banned — only one format. That limits the liberty cost: the state is not forbidding the underlying behaviour, only mandating a particular product form. The rise in reusable vape sales post-ban confirms the alternative is accessible in practice for many, which caps the coercive effect at minor. Nonetheless, a product ban IS a restriction on bodily autonomy and consumer choice. Up to 2.7 million ex-smokers relied on vapes for cessation or relapse prevention, and the ban on disposables — the chosen format for many — removes their preferred tool. Drug Science flags the specific concern that single-use devices were more accessible for adults with physical or mental health difficulties, meaning the restriction falls harder on some. This is a real liberty cost, not an incidental one. The car-vaping ban and outdoor restrictions (near schools, hospitals) extend state reach into private and semi-public spaces, further compressing adult freedom of choice even for reusable devices. The restrictions on under-18s (age-gated sales, on-the-spot fines) carry less O10 weight — minors have reduced legal liberty standing and age-based product restrictions are a well-established legislative category. Overall: the policy worsens O10 in a minor way. The activity is not prohibited, reusable alternatives exist and are being adopted, but a product ban on a legal adult choice — combined with new restrictions on where adults can vape — is a genuine, if modest, reduction in personal liberty.
Healthcare — Mixed picture
moderate · moderate confidence
Banning single-use vapes should reduce nicotine addiction among children, which is good for long-term health, but there is a real risk that some adult smokers who used disposables to quit will go back to cigarettes, which would be worse for their health. How big each effect turns out to be depends on whether reusable alternatives fill the gap.
The evidence
- The policy aims to halt dangerous vaping by children while recognising vaping's role in smoking cessation for adults. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “halt the dangerous use of vapes by children while recognising their role in smoking cessation for adults”
- Disposable vapes were the product of choice for 69% of 11–17-year-old vapers in Great Britain in 2023, up sharply from 7.7% in 2021. — healthmedia.blog.gov.uk (government) — “Disposable vapes were the product of choice for 69% of 11-17-year-old vapers in Great Britain in 2023, a significant rise from 7.7% in 2021”
- In 2023, 3.7% of young people aged 11–18 in Great Britain vaped regularly, with one in five 11–17-year-olds having tried e-cigarettes. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “In 2023, 3.7% of young people aged 11 to 18 in Great Britain vaped regularly, with one in five 11–17-year-olds having tried e-cigarettes”
- The NHS advises vaping is not for children and young people due to risks to their developing lungs and brains. — nhs.uk (media) — “The NHS advises that vaping is not for children and young people due to their developing lungs and brains”
- Hospital admissions of children in England for vaping-related disorders rose from 11 to 40 between 2020 and 2022. — independent.co.uk (media) — “In 2022, 40 children were admitted to hospital in England due to vaping-related disorders, up from 11 two years earlier”
- A survey found 18% of disposable vape users intended to switch to tobacco when the ban came into force. — yorkshirecancerresearch.org.uk (media) — “18% of disposable vape users in the region intended to switch to tobacco when the ban came into force”
- Up to 2.7 million UK ex-smokers relying on vapes could have their harm-reduction strategies disrupted. — rstreet.org (media) — “the harm-reduction strategies of up to 2.7 million UK ex-smokers relying on vapes could be disrupted”
- Vaping is recognised as significantly less harmful than smoking and an effective cessation tool. — rstreet.org (media) — “Vaping is recognized as a less harmful alternative to smoking (Public Health England famously estimated it to be 95% less harmful) and an effective tool for smoking cessation”
- Concerns have been raised that the ban could boost the illicit vape market, leading to sales of unregulated and potentially harmful products. — evapo.co.uk (media) — “the ban could boost the illicit vape market by up to £645 million, leading to the sale of unregulated and potentially harmful products”
- The policy includes quicker £100 on-the-spot fines for shops selling vapes to underage customers. — healthmedia.blog.gov.uk (government) — “quicker and simpler £100 on-the-spot fines for shops selling tobacco and vapes underage”
- The government's Swap to Stop programme generated approximately 125,000 additional quit attempts in its first year, with vapers 50% more likely to succeed than patch or gum users. — rstreet.org (media) — “in its first year, generated approximately 125,000 additional quit attempts, with vapers 50% more likely to succeed than those using patches or gum”
Biggest unknown: Whether adult disposable-vape users successfully switch to reusable vapes or relapse to cigarettes will determine whether this policy is a net health gain or loss for the adult population.
Our reading: The policy has two distinct and opposing effects on healthcare outcomes. On the positive side, disposable vapes were the dominant product among underage vapers — 69% of 11–17-year-old vapers used them in 2023 — and their removal, combined with stricter enforcement fines, should meaningfully reduce youth nicotine addiction. Given the NHS's warning about risks to developing lungs and brains, and rising paediatric hospital admissions, reducing youth uptake is a genuine health gain. On the negative side, disposables are also used by adult smokers as a cessation tool. Vaping is assessed as substantially less harmful than smoking, and millions of ex-smokers rely on vapes to stay off cigarettes. If a material fraction of those adult users relapse to smoking rather than switch to reusable vapes, the long-term disease burden (cancer, cardiovascular disease, COPD) could worsen. The scale of relapse risk is genuinely contested: the 200,000-person estimate has been challenged as industry-influenced, but independent surveys showing 18% intending to switch to tobacco and studies citing 2.7 million at-risk ex-smokers are credible enough to take seriously. The government's Swap to Stop programme and the rise in reusable vape sales provide a partial mitigation, but whether they fully absorb the demand from disposable users is unresolved. An illicit market adding unregulated products is a further wildcard that could undermine both youth protection and adult harm reduction. On balance, the evidence supports a 'mixed' verdict: real, near-term child health benefits are plausible and supported by institutional backing (RCPCH, NHS), but a real, if uncertain, adult health cost also exists. Neither side dominates the evidence sufficiently to call this a clear improvement or worsening.
Clean environment & nature — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Banning single-use vapes removes millions of lithium-battery-containing devices from weekly litter and landfill, cutting waste fires and conserving critical materials — though early data show the ban is only partially effective so far, with millions of vapes still being discarded weekly.
The evidence
- The policy bans the sale of single-use vapes. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “banning the sale of single-use vapes”
- Nearly 5 million disposable vapes were discarded or littered weekly in the UK in 2024. — defraenvironment.blog.gov.uk (government) — “In 2024, nearly 5 million disposable vapes were discarded or littered weekly in the UK, equivalent to eight vapes per second”
- Only about 1% of single-use vapes were recycled in practice, meaning the vast majority of the lithium, cobalt, and copper they contain was wasted. — eunomia.eco (media) — “only about 1% of single-use vapes being recycled in practice”
- In 2022, over 40 tonnes of lithium from disposable vapes were discarded — enough to power 5,000 electric vehicles. — defraenvironment.blog.gov.uk (government) — “In 2022, over 40 tonnes of lithium from disposable vapes were discarded, enough to power 5,000 electric vehicles”
- Lithium-ion batteries from discarded vapes caused over 1,200 fires in bin lorries and waste sites in the UK in 2023, a 70% increase from the prior year. — defraenvironment.blog.gov.uk (government) — “over 1,200 battery fires in bin lorries and waste sites across the UK in 2023, a 70% increase from the previous year”
- The ban on single-use vapes came into legal effect on 1 June 2025 across England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales. — eunomia.eco (media) — “The ban on the sale and supply of single-use vapes across England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales came into effect on June 1, 2025”
- Early figures suggest a nearly quarter fall in discarded vapes and pods since the ban, but around 6.3 million are still being thrown away each week including pods. — theguardian.com (media) — “Initial figures from Material Focus suggest a nearly quarter fall in discarded vapes and pods since the ban, with approximately 6.3 million still being thrown away each week (including pods)”
- Challenges remain: waste companies still report batteries causing fires and many consumers are unaware of proper recycling methods for reusable vapes. — theguardian.com (media) — “waste companies still report issues with batteries causing fires, and many consumers are unaware of proper recycling methods for even reusable vapes”
- The ban is projected to reduce the volume of lithium batteries entering general waste and decrease fires in waste management facilities. — defraenvironment.blog.gov.uk (government) — “By preventing lithium-ion batteries from entering general waste, the ban is expected to decrease the number of fires in waste management facilities”
- There are concerns that the ban could boost the illicit vape market by up to £645 million, potentially leading to unregulated products that circumvent environmental standards. — evapo.co.uk (media) — “the ban could boost the illicit vape market by up to £645 million, leading to the sale of unregulated and potentially harmful products”
- Over £1 million worth of banned disposable vapes were still sold in UK convenience stores in the first week after the ban. — servelegal.co.uk (media) — “over £1 million worth of banned disposable vapes were still sold in UK convenience stores in the first week post-ban”
Biggest unknown: Whether enforcement can suppress the illicit disposable market and whether consumers fully shift to properly-recycled reusable alternatives will determine the scale of the environmental gain.
Our reading: The environmental case for this policy on O6 is clear in direction. The measurable baseline is stark: nearly 5 million single-use vapes were discarded weekly, with only 1% recycled, losing over 40 tonnes of lithium annually and causing 1,200+ battery fires in waste infrastructure in a single year — a 70% year-on-year rise. These are direct, evidenced harms to the waste environment and material conservation. The ban is legally in force (June 2025), so it is not merely aspirational; it has a delivered mechanism. The projected benefit is a reduction in these waste flows and fire incidents. Early post-ban data are encouraging on direction — roughly a quarter fewer discarded vapes — but the absolute number remains large (6.3 million weekly including pods), enforcement leakage is real (£1m+ in banned sales in week one), and the illicit market risk is material. The shift of consumers to reusable vapes, which have higher recycling complexity, adds uncertainty: if consumers do not recycle reusable devices properly, some battery-fire risk migrates rather than disappears. On balance, the policy materially reduces the worst of the single-use waste and fire risk — a genuine environmental improvement — but the magnitude is capped at 'moderate' because early data show significant residual waste flows and enforcement gaps. The time horizon is this-parliament since the ban is already in effect and initial effects are observable. There is no material near/long-term divergence on the environmental dimension, so no time_split is needed.