SABS to develop first standards for vaping products

Rob Fisher

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The South African Bureau of Standards (SABS) is starting to draft the first set of standards for vaping products in South Africa.

Currently in South Africa, and on the rest of the continent, there are no guidelines or regulations for vaping products.

The new SABS standards will cover electronic vaping products and their components, including cartridges.

"It is estimated that about 350 000 people use vaping products [in South Africa] and that sales in 2019 amounted to R1.25 billion. As the industry grows, there is a need to establish national standards that guide the quality of the products and provide consumers with some assurance that the electronic devices and products used in vaping are safe to use," said Jodi Scholtz, lead administrator at the SABS.

The Department of Health has prepared a draft bill on the control of tobacco products and electronic devices products that is currently open for public enquiry.

The SABS says its new standards will focus on vaping products and take into account the inclusions of the draft bill, "with the knowledge that standards are voluntary in nature".

The SABS standards will also be subject to public comment.

"All comments are then taken into account in the next stage of developing the draft standard into a national standard (SANS)," says Scholtz.

It takes on average about 300 days to develop a national standard.
 
With all the disposable crap popping up everywhere, this can only be a good thing.
 
With all the disposable crap popping up everywhere, this can only be a good thing.
If they help people give up smoking, I can live with them (also, they're handy for travel). I just wish they were recyclable.
 
If they help people give up smoking, I can live with them (also, they're handy for travel). I just wish they were recyclable.
They have their place, no doubt. But the majority I've seen is coming from China, and we know the quality control they have there.
 

The South African Bureau of Standards (SABS) is starting to draft the first set of standards for vaping products in South Africa.

Currently in South Africa, and on the rest of the continent, there are no guidelines or regulations for vaping products.

The new SABS standards will cover electronic vaping products and their components, including cartridges.

"It is estimated that about 350 000 people use vaping products [in South Africa] and that sales in 2019 amounted to R1.25 billion. As the industry grows, there is a need to establish national standards that guide the quality of the products and provide consumers with some assurance that the electronic devices and products used in vaping are safe to use," said Jodi Scholtz, lead administrator at the SABS.

The Department of Health has prepared a draft bill on the control of tobacco products and electronic devices products that is currently open for public enquiry.

The SABS says its new standards will focus on vaping products and take into account the inclusions of the draft bill, "with the knowledge that standards are voluntary in nature".

The SABS standards will also be subject to public comment.

"All comments are then taken into account in the next stage of developing the draft standard into a national standard (SANS)," says Scholtz.

It takes on average about 300 days to develop a national standard.
I see this as a way for them toward taxing and banning vape products. Once they set a standard the next thing is to regulate...
 
I see this as a way for them toward taxing and banning vape products. Once they set a standard the next thing is to regulate...

Nope. The SABS project has zero to do with taxation. Taxation is already being discussed and the fight is on.
 
This is great - it’s about time
as long as the standards are reasonable , then it should be a good thing
they are smart to have @Rob Fisher involved. He has Vaping’s best interest at heart
 
Nope. The SABS project has zero to do with taxation. Taxation is already being discussed and the fight is on.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it. I've seen many things going through SABS for testing and the outcome affected the whole industry because it was now recognized at the bureau of Standards. (Coming from a quality background)
They'll have grounds to tax vaping products and products will become more expensive due to everything associated with SABS (licenses, certificates etc) and everything not approved will become illegal.
For now I'll rest my case, but we'll continue this topic again soon in its own thread. I wish I'm wrong on this...
 
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SABS Vaping Standards Open for Public Comment

The deadline for submitting comments is 16 July 2024

How to ...

Visit the SABS website <-click this link
Review the proposed standards
Prepare your comments and suggestions, and;
Submit your feedback (How to submit is detailed on the first page of the document)

Don’t miss this opportunity to voice your opinion ... Your participation is crucial in shaping fair and effective vaping standards.
 
products will become more expensive due to everything associated with SABS (licenses, certificates etc) and everything not approved will become illegal.
This is the problem. These prohibitive costs also means that smaller device manufacturers (ones that we hobbyists love best) will simply refuse to export to us. Same problem for small local guys making dispos.

Can anyone explain why vape devices need electromagnetic compatibility?? @Intuthu Kagesi?
Surely whatever vapes generate are absolutely miniscule. Vapes don't even plug into walls.

 
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This is the problem. These prohibitive costs also means that smaller device manufacturers (ones that we hobbyists love best) will simply refuse to export to us. Same problem for small local guys making dispos.

Can anyone explain why vape devices need electromagnetic compatibility?? @Intuthu Kagesi?
Surely whatever vapes generate are absolutely miniscule. Vapes don't even plug into walls.

The standard refers to RFI, (Radio Frequency Interference) ... radiated interference ... where certain vape devices running PWM, (Pulse Width Modulation), operate at frequencies that could interfere with other electronic devices if not properly screened internally. The standard was originally devised to protect Amplitude Modulated radios, however it has subsequently been proven that without proper screening, electronic devices can interfere with one another, mainly due to harmonic resonance. Noisy Crickets for example can crash a computer and interfere with other PWM devices, (which is pretty much every modern mains powered electronic device).
 
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The standard refers to RFI, (Radio Frequency Interference) ... radiated interference ... where certain vape devices running PWM, (Pulse Width Modulation), operate at frequencies that could interfere with other electronic devices if not properly screened internally. The standard was originally devised to protect Amplitude Modulated radios, however it has subsequently been proven that without proper screening, electronic devices can interfere with one another, mainly due to harmonic resonance. Noisy Crickets for example can crash a computer and interfere with other PWM devices, (which is pretty much every modern mains powered electronic device).
I see. I seriously doubt though that every piece of daily electrnoics around us all have been emc certified?

I'd pay a few bucks to see a noisy cricket do that. lol.
 
I see. I seriously doubt though that every piece of daily electrnoics around us all have been emc certified?

I'd pay a few bucks to see a noisy cricket do that. lol.
You're right ... It's all supposed to be, and ... well ... this is SA, where pretty much anything can be bought :rolleyes:

As to the OG NC ... It was not only audibly noisy, it transmits said "noise" very effectively
 
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