Australia’s record AUD $1.5 million fine against Tobacco Shed Pty Ltd, linked to businessman Sam Kanjo, exposes the flaws in punitive high-tax policies. Over 70% of cigarette prices comprises tax, fuelling a AUD $4–6 billion illicit market.
Queensland raids seized 213,000 illicit cigarettes, 25kg of loose tobacco, and 6,000 vapes across five stores. Black-market packs sell for AUD $8 against AUD $40+ for legal ones, proving demand endures despite steep taxes and handing profits to violent crime syndicates.
Scientific consensus affirms vaping presents far lower risks than smoking combustible tobacco. Notably, 73% of Australian smokers use vaping to quit, while 93% of ex-smokers cite its reduced harm as a key reason. Among vaping smokers, 81% aim to reduce or quit entirely; 92% of ex-smokers perceive it as less harmful.
Surveys confirm smokers and ex-smokers favour accessible vaping for cessation, yet prescription-only restrictions drive illicit demand. Models demonstrate that relaxing vape regulations would accelerate Australia’s smoking decline, mirroring successes elsewhere.
CAPHRA’s recent submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee warns illicit trade booms under prohibition, urging regulated vaping markets to shrink crime – as in New Zealand and the Philippines.
“Punitive taxes push Australians towards criminals, not quitting,” said Nancy Loucas, CAPHRA Executive Coordinator. “Education on evidence-based options works. Prohibition fails.”
“Regulate vapes affordably, as New Zealand has done successfully,” Loucas urged. “Their vaping promotion rapidly lowered adult smoking rates.”
CAPHRA encourages authorities to pivot from punishment to education. Inform adults about harm reduction science, regulate vapes accessibly, and promote switching to safer alternatives. Supportive policies can undercut black markets, enhance compliance, and save lives. Australians seek informed choices for quitting safely.
“CAPHRA invites collaboration on educative campaigns to empower decisions based on evidence, rather than enforcement alone,” Loucas said.
Contact:
N.E. Loucas,
Executive Coordinator CAPHRA (Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates)
Mobile: +64272348643
Email: [email protected]
Web: https://caphraorg.net/


