sasha wrote:
I've found a couple of references in the legislation that might be of interest ;
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2005/ ... sion/2/1/4Scottish law but gives a meaning of smoke - 'Subsection (1) provides the meaning of “smoke” which in the context of Part 1 of the Act means to smoke tobacco or any other substance or mixture which can be smoked. This subsection further clarifies that a person is to be taken as smoking if the person holds or is otherwise in possession or control of lit tobacco or any other lit substance or mixture which can be smoked.' - I suppose could include e-cigs as the vapour is a substance which is
smoked?
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/28/section/1Which says - (a)“smoking” refers to smoking tobacco or anything which contains tobacco, or smoking any other substance, and .
(b)smoking includes being in possession of lit tobacco or of anything lit which contains tobacco, or being in possession of any other lit substance in a form in which it could be smoked. .
So the e-cigs debate boils down to whether or not they contain a substance that can be smoked regardless of whether they contain tobacco or not, and whether the vapour is a 'lit substance'. Is using an e-cig smoking or inhaling ? Likewise is using an ordinary cigarette inhaling also ? Does 'smoking' and 'inhaling' in this context mean the same thing ?
Smoke, is a substance you can see both when lit inhaled or exhaled, the E cigs cannot be lit, and you cannot see anything other than water vapour, and are more or less, in layman's terms like boiling a kettle, the nicotine in each draw is one eighth of that of a normal ciggy draw, but without the other cr@p contained in a ciggy