Fears sparked by US lung disease outbreak will hit vaping worldwide

The recent outbreak of lung disease linked to vaping in the US will seriously inhibit growth in the world’s e-cigarette industry over the coming year, ECigIntelligence analysis predicts.

The US will suffer the business consequences most heavily, with the market expected to shrink by 13%, despite an earlier prediction – before the lung outbreak – of double-digit year-on-year growth.

This anticipated market contraction is largely attributed to dual users abandoning e-cigs and reverting to combustible products alone, with the appeal of vaping diminished both by the lung outbreak itself and by the bans on vaping products subsequently imposed by some US states.

Globally, the vaping market in 2020 will be valued at $14.4bn, implying zero growth between 2019 and 2020. Before the emergence of these issues affecting the industry, ECigIntelligence had forecast 14% year-on-year growth.

The consequences of the high-profile events in the US will be felt less acutely in other countries, but both Canada and Britain will be affected, ECigIntelligence predicts. In both countries, the market will continue to grow by 10% over the year, but previous forecasts were significantly higher: 20% for Canada and 17% for the UK.

However, other major European markets are not expected to be substantially impacted over the year, despite anecdotal reports of vape stores in countries such as France, Belgium and Italy seeing a slackening of sales since the crisis erupted.

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What This Means: It’s likely that substantial damage has already been done to the US market, and although it may very well slow down – particularly as authorities move away from blaming nicotine products for the outbreak – it’s unlikely that it will be reversed any time soon.

Even if (and it’s an optimistic “if”) the media and state governments fully accept the developing consensus that street THC rather than legitimate nicotine is the source of the problem, scientific news updates and quiet termination of temporary prohibitions are unlikely to be as widely noticed as the hysteria that preceded them.

In the meantime, consumers abandoning vapour and returning to smoking will not only be a blow to the sector, but also threatens to reverse many of the public-health benefits that e-cigarettes have conferred.

Both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are now advising that vapers who use these products should not return to smoking. But again, it may well be too late to completely reverse the harm in terms of public perception.

– Barnaby Page ECigIntelligence staff

Photo: Erica Crossen

Barnaby Page

Editorial director
Before joining ECigIntelligence in early 2014 as one of its first employees, Barnaby had a 30-year career as a reporter and editor for newspapers, magazines and online services, working in Canada, the US and the Middle East as well as his current British location. He has edited publications covering fields including technology and the advertising industry, and was launch editor of the first large daily online news service in the British regional media. Barnaby also writes on classical music and film for a number of publications. Barnaby manages the editorial and reporting teams and works closely with the analyst teams, to ensure that all content meets high standards of quality and relevance. He also writes for the site occasionally, mostly on science-related issues, and is a member of the Association of British Science Writers.

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