No More EU snus sale again

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Fazer
    Member
    • May 2011
    • 663

    #121
    Thanks for that muddyfunkstar. Fly under the radar of the snus police, you can bet your life they watch this place

    Comment

    • muddyfunkstar
      Member
      • Aug 2010
      • 967

      #122
      Originally posted by Fazer
      Thanks for that muddyfunkstar. Fly under the radar of the snus police, you can bet your life they watch this place
      Yeah, we should really be talking about this stuff in the group.

      Comment

      • Fazer
        Member
        • May 2011
        • 663

        #123
        Originally posted by muddyfunkstar
        Yeah, we should really be talking about this stuff in the group.
        This group ?

        http://www.snuson.com/forum/group.php?groupid=21

        Comment

        • muddyfunkstar
          Member
          • Aug 2010
          • 967

          #124
          Originally posted by Fazer
          Aye, only group members can view content, I believe.

          Edit, nope, I'm wrong. It's not private.

          Comment

          • Fazer
            Member
            • May 2011
            • 663

            #125
            Originally posted by Vulpes
            Lucky I'm heading off to Göteborg with another member on the 7th lol
            Are you doing an overnight splash and dash, getting your stock from the duty free shop at the airport when you fly back, or from the shops on the street? I was wondering how much I needed to budget, for a three night stopover? I’m thinking about 500 quid, maybe 600. I’d need period returns from the Isle of Wight to London and back, flight, accommodation, food for three days, and 3 kilo of snus. That’s got to be 500 or 600 quid

            This is a good duty free shop at Stockholm Arlanda


            http://www.arlanda.se/en/Information...-in-the-world/

            Also, the Tobacco and Match Museum is in Stockholm, why did you pick Göteborg ?

            Comment

            • dpete

              #126
              Originally posted by Fazer

              This is a good duty free shop at Stockholm Arlanda


              http://www.arlanda.se/en/Information...-in-the-world/
              Fantastic, a snusidor staffed by a tobacco expert. Sure hope I can get there someday.

              Comment

              • Fazer
                Member
                • May 2011
                • 663

                #127
                Originally posted by dpete
                Fantastic, a snusidor staffed by a tobacco expert. Sure hope I can get there someday.
                That's why when i do my trip, i think i should fly to Stockholm Arlanda Airport and load up with duty free on the way out. Do the airports in Goteborg have the same i wonder ? If you can get it duty free on the way out, why buy it in town?

                Comment

                • muddyfunkstar
                  Member
                  • Aug 2010
                  • 967

                  #128
                  Originally posted by Thor
                  Yes loose snus is legal in Denmark, and here is a Danish website
                  but only v2 snuffhttp://www.snusshoppen.dk/
                  This was a total non-starter. They never even completed the payment from my credit card. Money came back to the card today. No communication either.

                  Ah well, easy come, easy go.

                  Comment

                  • Fazer
                    Member
                    • May 2011
                    • 663

                    #129
                    Originally posted by muddyfunkstar
                    This was a total non-starter. They never even completed the payment from my credit card. Money came back to the card today. No communication either.

                    Ah well, easy come, easy go.
                    That's a bummer, i was looking at that site today ... Ah well

                    Comment

                    • Snuts
                      Member
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 157

                      #130
                      Originally posted by Frosted
                      The meeting was organised on the request of industry representatives in order to discuss
                      the ongoing revision of the Tobacco Products Directive (TPD). It was agreed that the
                      meeting will be structured according to product categories: cigars, smokeless tobacco and
                      pipe tobacco and roll-your-own.

                      ...


                      Mr Rutqvist gave a presentation on snus. According to him the reasons to ban snus have
                      been rebutted by the recent scientific studies. First, snus is not attractive to young people
                      and is not a gateway to smoking. Second, it does not cause oral cancer and there is no
                      clear link to pancreatic cancer. Third, it is less addictive than cigarettes. He also stressed
                      that snus is less harmful to health than cigarettes. Two industry sponsored studies (from
                      US and Serbia) showed that snus was an effective way to quit smoking, and it is the most
                      common quitting aid in Norway and Sweden.
                      Concerning smokeless tobacco, SANCO asked ESTA and ESTOC to send further
                      information on:
                      - overview of product categories
                      - estimated market size for 2011 (value, volumes, ideally per MS) per category and trends
                      since 2002
                      - producers (name, address, turnover, number of employees)
                      - consumers (age, gender, regions)
                      - flavours used.
                      SANCO asked ESTOC to send all new scientific publications on snus since its last
                      submission (including information on who sponsored the respective study) and – to the
                      extent available – information on consumers (age, gender, cessation).
                      ESTA and ESTOC promised to send the information in the second week of January.

                      All associations were given the opportunity to also submit other relevant
                      information/views, but were invited to be concise. The information should be received in
                      the second week of January.


                      So this meeting was on the 6th January 2012. If I understand it was asked to ESTOC (european smokeless tobacco council) and ESTA (european smoking tobacco association) to present all new scientific publications on snus since their last submission and also to submit other relevant information/views.
                      Have they done it?
                      And if they did, has someone looked into it?
                      Is this ban related with this meeting?

                      Welcome to the EU, welcome to the free market, they told us...

                      Comment

                      • Snusdog
                        Member
                        • Jun 2008
                        • 6752

                        #131
                        Ok who are SANCO, ESTA, and ESTOC and what impact do they have on shaping the EU laws

                        For all I know this could be 7 or 8 guys who meet at the pub once a month to discuss women and snus.

                        Note: I am not asking for what the Acronyms stand for (I got that from the report)......... but rather what real policy making power do these groups have (especially SANCO)


                        When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

                        Comment

                        • Snuts
                          Member
                          • Dec 2010
                          • 157

                          #132
                          I think the job of SANCO is to help make europe's citizens healthier, safer and more confident, a least that's what they claim in their website.

                          http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/health_consumer/index_en.htm


                          Who they are?

                          According to their site:

                          DG Health and Consumers has around 960 staff.

                          About 660 of us are in Brussels;
                          About 120 work in Luxembourg and another 180 in Grange, near Dublin

                          I'm like you snusdog, for all I know this could be 960 guys who meet at the pub once a month to discuss women and snus.


                          The ESTOC site is pretty interesting: http://estoc.org/


                          Dec 7 (Reuters) - The European Commission has promised Sweden it will take another look at its ban of the tobacco product snus, which is allowed in Sweden but banned elsewhere in the European Union, the Swedish trade minister said on Wednesday.

                          Swedish Match is Europe's biggest producer of snus, or wet snuff, which is put under the upper lip and is mostly sold as small pouches of tobacco.

                          Trade minister Ewa Bjorling said she had met EU Health Commissioner John Dalli and discussed the results of a survey of EU states about current tobacco laws.

                          "What I believe is most important is that you base your reasoning on scientific facts. That is what I try to tell Dalli, and I ask the question: Why do you still want to have a ban on Swedish wet snuff when there are other snuff products on the market in the EU, for example Pakistani snuff?," Bjorling told Reuters.

                          This was the second time she raised the snus issue with Dalli.

                          "I think he was listening in a different way this time. The first time he dismissed it simply saying their goal is to get everything away for health reasons," Bjorling said.

                          Sweden says it has a lower proportion of deaths from lung cancer than in other EU states and a lower level of smokers.

                          Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter has reported that its own examination of the answers to the Commission's survey showed that a majority of people in member states wanted to end the snus ban, even if most members states supported keeping it.

                          The Commission is expected to propose a new tobacco products law during the spring next year and released the results of a survey in July of attitudes to the current law, including the ban on snus.

                          The survey, which is on the Commission's website, was carried out by asking questions to EU citizens, industry representatives, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and government representatives.

                          Most answers came from Italy and Poland, and the Commission noted that Italian tobacconists had organised a campaign to encourage submissions to the survey.

                          The survey showed that EU citizens and industry representatives were in favour of lifting the snus ban, while most EU states and NGOs wanted it maintained.

                          The main markets for Swedish Match's snus products are Sweden, Norway and the United States.

                          http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/...7N73L820111207

                          )

                          Comment

                          • lxskllr
                            Member
                            • Sep 2007
                            • 13435

                            #133
                            Originally posted by Snuts
                            The survey showed that EU citizens and industry representatives were in favour of lifting the snus ban, while most EU states and NGOs wanted it maintained.
                            Why does the "state" have a say in this? I thought they were supposed to be representatives of the people.

                            Comment

                            • Fazer
                              Member
                              • May 2011
                              • 663

                              #134
                              Originally posted by Snuts
                              I think the job of SANCO is to help make europe's citizens healthier, safer and more confident, a least that's what they claim in their website.
                              I don’t need any 'help' with this, I’m an adult, I can do it all by myself

                              Comment

                              • Snuts
                                Member
                                • Dec 2010
                                • 157

                                #135
                                Originally posted by Fazer
                                I don’t need any 'help' with this, I’m an adult, I can do it all by myself
                                Yeah and who needs the kind of help they are giving us...

                                Comment

                                Related Topics

                                Collapse

                                Working...
                                X