FDA to ban store sales of most flavored nicotine products, restrict sales online

In a move aimed at restricting access to the e-cigarettes most popular among adolescents, the FDA plans to pull most flavored nicotine liquids from convenience store and gas station shelves, according to The Wall Street Journal.

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The new policy will bar convenience stores and gas stations from selling pod-style nicotine in flavors other than tobacco, mint and menthol beginning next week. In addition, the policy will enforce stricter age-verification requirements for online sales of e-cigarettes.

Most e-cigarette sales are made at brick-and-mortar retail stores, so the policy change will likely have a negative effect on companies in the business. It is also likely to draw legal action.

Juul, the popular e-cigarette company known for its sleek vape device, accounted for 75 percent of the U.S. market for the four weeks ended Oct. 6, according to the report.

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