France Proposes Lifetime Tobacco Ban for Anyone Born After 2009
The French National Health Insurance (Cnam) has recommended a permanent ban on tobacco sales to anyone born after 2009. Published in its annual report on July 2, this proposal aims to eliminate youth smoking but faces immediate resistance from retail lobbies and complex European Union tax negotiations.
This recommendation could mark a shift in French preventive health policy. Under the proposed plan, youths who are currently 17 years old or younger would never be allowed to legally purchase tobacco products in France, even after they reach adulthood.
The initiative is modeled after the UK’s Tobacco and Vapes Act, which establishes a similar progressive sales ban. In France, the proposal has gained political traction. Health Minister Stéphanie Rist expressed personal support for the measure, followed by a joint declaration from six former health ministers backing a cross-party bill introduced by Green MP Nicolas Thierry.
The Health and Economic Toll of Smoking in France
For Cnam, the motivations behind this policy are both medical and financial. Tobacco use remains the leading cause of preventable death in France, accounting for 68,000 premature deaths annually—more than one in ten of all recorded deaths.
Despite existing restrictions, between 150,000 and 200,000 young people in France start smoking every year. Data from the French Observatory for Drugs and Drug Addiction (OFDT) estimates the annual social cost of tobacco at €156 billion. This total includes over €20 billion in direct healthcare expenditures to treat cardiovascular diseases and cancers.
To curb these numbers, public health advocates argue that radical supply-side interventions are necessary to prevent the next generation from developing nicotine dependencies.
Retailer Opposition and the Challenge of Enforcement
The National Confederation of Tobacconists (Confédération nationale des buralistes) opposes the proposed ban. Beyond the threat to retail revenues, the organization points to France’s geographic reality compared to the UK’s island geography.
Retail representatives argue that a generational ban will not stop consumption but will instead drive buyers toward illicit street trade and cross-border purchasing. Because France shares open land borders with several lower-tax countries, local tobacconists fear they will lose business to unregulated black-market networks.
In response to these enforcement concerns, the National Committee Against Smoking (CNCT) emphasizes that the immediate priority must be enforcing current laws. The CNCT supports the generational ban but insists on stricter age verification for existing products. Cnam’s report suggests implementing mystery shopper campaigns to identify and penalize retailers who sell to minors, drawing inspiration from strict enforcement models used in countries like the Maldives.
The Pivot to Vaping and Alternative Nicotine Products
The debate is further complicated by the rise of alternative nicotine delivery systems. As traditional cigarette sales decline, tobacco manufacturers have shifted their focus to electronic cigarettes and nicotine pouches.
The non-governmental organization Contre-Feu recently launched a campaign highlighting how the tobacco industry uses sweet-flavored vapes to attract younger consumers. According to recent surveys, more than half of French 17-year-olds have tried vaping, often influenced by marketing campaigns in student areas and festivals.
While manufacturers like Philip Morris publicly advocate for a “world without cigarettes,” they actively oppose generational bans on alternative products, arguing that these devices serve as harm-reduction tools for adult smokers.
Industry lobbyists frequently cite Sweden as a model, where the adult daily smoking rate has fallen below 5% due to the widespread use of snus. However, public health experts counter that Sweden’s success is the result of decades of strict advertising bans, high taxation, and limited product visibility at points of sale, rather than the promotion of alternative nicotine products.
The European Union Fiscal Battle
Because cross-border shopping weakens national tobacco policies, Cnam stresses the need for coordinated action at the European Union level. However, updating the EU Tobacco Excise Directive (TED/TTD) to set higher minimum tax rates requires unanimous agreement from all member states.
This requirement has created a divide within the European Parliament regarding how alternative nicotine products should be taxed.
| EU Member State Factions | Key Countries | Policy Stance |
|---|---|---|
| Pro-Taxation Coalition | France, Ireland, and 10 other member states | Support high minimum tax rates on both traditional tobacco and new nicotine products to protect public health. |
| Anti-Taxation Coalition | Italy, Czech Republic, Sweden, and others | Oppose high taxes on alternative products to preserve financial accessibility of substitutes and protect local manufacturing. |
On June 3, the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) adopted a modified report favoring a more gradual tax increase. Proponents of this softer approach argued that rapid tax hikes could fuel illicit trade and harm public revenues.
The legislative debate will continue under the Irish presidency of the EU Council. Ireland currently ranks at the top of the Tobacco Control Scale in Europe, and health advocates hope Dublin will prioritize stricter fiscal measures.
The outcome of these negotiations in Brussels will test France’s health diplomacy. The domestic debate will resume in autumn during the review of the Social Security Financing Bill (PLFSS), which will reveal whether the French government is prepared to turn its preventive health goals into a direct legislative confrontation with the tobacco industry.
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