Skip to content
Close Menu
ConvictionConviction
  • Home
  • Law & Justice
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Ask The Expert
  • Get In Touch

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates

June 2, 2026

Evicted Durban tenants win urgent court order pending eviction challenge

June 2, 2026

Pension fund withdrawal benefits are determined by rules, not contributions

June 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates
  • Evicted Durban tenants win urgent court order pending eviction challenge
  • Pension fund withdrawal benefits are determined by rules, not contributions
  • Teachers win compensation after decade of rolling contracts ruled unlawful
  • Tshwane loses land expropriation battle, ordered to relocate Kanana Village residents
  • Sportscene lawyers ordered to pay costs after appeal delayed by flawed court record
  • Do South Africa’s archives serve justice or preserve historical injustice?
  • Turning your home into student accommodation could cost landlords dearly
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
ConvictionConviction
Sonneblom
  • Home
  • Law & Justice
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Ask The Expert
  • Get In Touch
ConvictionConviction
Home » South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates
Opinion

South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates

Public health expert Prof Lekan Ayo-Yusuf argues that South Africa must act urgently to curb rising youth nicotine addiction and close regulatory gaps before a new generation becomes dependent on nicotine.
Professor Lekan Ayo-YusufBy Professor Lekan Ayo-YusufJune 2, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
  • Research shows that smoking and vaping among South Africans aged 16 to 34 have increased significantly over the past 15 years.
  • Flavoured products, influencer marketing and attractive packaging are helping to drive nicotine addiction among young people.
  • Delays in regulating vaping and other nicotine products are leaving South Africa vulnerable while youth addiction continues to rise.

Every year on World No Tobacco Day (31 May), the world is reminded that tobacco remains one of the leading preventable causes of death. And this year’s theme – ‘Unmasking the appeal: countering nicotine and tobacco addiction’ – could not be more relevant to South Africa’s current moment.

The tobacco and nicotine industry today no longer depends only on cigarettes. It now relies on deception, product engineering, flavours, attractive packaging, social media influencers and carefully crafted “harm reduction” narratives designed to make addiction appear modern, harmless – and even socially desirable.

Behind the glossy packaging and sleek devices lies the same business model: recruiting new users, especially young people, to sustain profits. And South Africa is increasingly becoming a target.

A growing youth nicotine crisis

Research from the Africa Centre for Tobacco Industry Monitoring and Policy Research (ATIM) at the University of Pretoria (UP) shows that smoking and vaping among young South Africans aged 16–34 years have increased significantly over the past 15 years. Cigarette smoking prevalence in this age group rose from 15.3% in 2010/11 to 27.3% in 2024/25, while vaping increased dramatically from 0.3% to 11.1% over the same period.

These trends directly contradict the tobacco industry’s repeated claim that newer nicotine products are reducing smoking at the population level. Instead, the evidence increasingly suggests that these products are expanding nicotine addiction and normalising smoking-like behaviours among youth.

How the industry attracts young users

The industry’s strategy is not accidental. Flavours such as bubble gum, mango and cotton candy are clearly not designed for long-term adult smokers trying to quit. Colour-coded packaging, glamorous retail outlets and influencer marketing are not public health interventions; they are recruitment tools, as they appeal particularly to young people, including those who have never used nicotine products.

This is precisely why this year’s World No Tobacco Day theme matters. We must expose the tactics used to make dangerous and addictive products attractive, particularly to adolescents and young adults whose brains remain vulnerable to nicotine addiction, especially before the age of 21 years.

The dangers of nicotine addiction

Nicotine is not harmless. It affects brain development, attention, mood regulation and addiction pathways in young people. Increasing evidence also links vaping among adolescents to respiratory problems, impaired concentration and a greater likelihood of later cigarette smoking.

Yet, while the science becomes clearer, South Africa’s regulatory response to unmask the appeal remains dangerously slow. The Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill, first introduced in 2022, remains stalled despite years of public consultation and mounting evidence of harm at the population level. Meanwhile, the nicotine market continues to evolve faster than regulation.

Why regulation has fallen behind

This delay benefits only one group: the tobacco and nicotine industry. We have seen this playbook before. For decades, the tobacco industry denied the harms of cigarettes, manipulated nicotine delivery, and marketed products aggressively while resisting regulation at every stage. Internal industry documents later revealed deliberate strategies to sustain addiction and undermine public health measures.

Today, similar tactics are being repackaged through vaping and newer nicotine products under the language of “innovation” and “harm reduction”. But genuine harm reduction cannot mean creating a new generation addicted to nicotine.

The reality is that South Africa currently has major regulatory gaps. Many e-cigarette products are sold without standardised health warnings, ingredient disclosure, packaging restrictions or meaningful controls on nicotine levels, flavours and advertising. Social media promotion targeting youth remains widespread.

Countries such as Kenya have already moved to require graphic health warnings on e-cigarette packaging, recognising that these products are not risk-free. The tobacco companies opposing this same regulatory requirement in South Africa are complying in Kenya and elsewhere in the world. South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates.

The public also needs to understand that “smoke-free” does not mean “harmless”. Studies of heated tobacco products and e-cigarettes continue to identify toxic substances, including cancer-causing chemicals, in their emissions and aerosols. Recent international studies, including work involving South African products, found that colour-coded heated tobacco variants marketed as “lighter” or “milder” did not contain lower levels of harmful substances than supposedly stronger variants.

Closing the gaps in tobacco control

The appeal itself is part of the danger. This is why stronger regulation is urgently needed. South Africa should fully implement evidence-based measures aligned with the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and the WHO’s MPOWER measures aimed at assisting in the country-level implementation of effective interventions to reduce the demand for tobacco.

These measures should include comprehensive regulation of all nicotine and tobacco products; plain or standardised packaging; restrictions on flavours appealing to youth; stronger enforcement against advertising and social media promotion; higher tobacco taxation; improved actions against illicit tobacco trade; and expanded access to structured cessation support services.

Importantly, policymakers must resist efforts to weaken or delay the current Bill through industry lobbying and misinformation campaigns. Every year of delay means more young people becoming addicted before protections are in place.

A crossroads for public health

World No Tobacco Day should not merely be symbolic. It should serve as a warning. South Africa stands at a crossroads. We can either act decisively to protect the next generation from nicotine addiction, or we can allow commercial interests to shape the future of public health.

The evidence is already clear. The question is whether we have the political courage to act on it before even more lives are placed at risk.

Conviction.co.za

Get your news on the go. Click here to follow the Conviction WhatsApp channel.

public health tobacco control Vaping in South Africa World No Tobacco Day Youth nicotine addiction
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Professor Lekan Ayo-Yusuf

Professor of Public Health and Chair of the School of Health Systems and Public Health at the University of Pretoria.

Related Posts

Do South Africa’s archives serve justice or preserve historical injustice?

June 1, 2026

South Africa’s wage employment trap stifles innovation and creativity

May 27, 2026

When taps run dry: Lessons South Africa and Bulgaria cannot afford to ignore

May 26, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Prove your humanity: 2   +   7   =  

Subscribe to our newsletter:
Top Posts

Making sectional title rules that work: A practical guide

January 17, 2025

Protection order among the consequences of trespassing in an ‘Exclusive Use Area’

December 31, 2024

Between a rock and a foul-smelling place

November 27, 2024

Irregular levy increases, mismanagement, and legal threats in a sectional title scheme

June 2, 2025
Don't Miss
Opinion
5 Mins Read

South Africa cannot afford to lag while youth nicotine addiction escalates

By Professor Lekan Ayo-YusufJune 2, 20265 Mins Read

Smoking and vaping among young South Africans have risen sharply over the past 15 years, raising concerns about nicotine addiction and delayed regulation.

Evicted Durban tenants win urgent court order pending eviction challenge

June 2, 2026

Pension fund withdrawal benefits are determined by rules, not contributions

June 2, 2026

Teachers win compensation after decade of rolling contracts ruled unlawful

June 2, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • WhatsApp
Demo
About Us
About Us

Helping South Africans to navigate the legal landscape; providing accessible legal information; and giving a voice to those seeking justice.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube WhatsApp Twitch RSS
Latest posts

Making sectional title rules that work: A practical guide

January 17, 2025

Protection order among the consequences of trespassing in an ‘Exclusive Use Area’

December 31, 2024

Between a rock and a foul-smelling place

November 27, 2024
OUR PICKS

Online marketplace scams are becoming more sophisticated, warns fraud expert Ashwini Singh

May 26, 2026

Understanding employee rights, workplace protections and grievance resolution in South Africa

June 8, 2025

R13,914 debt triggers sale of R380 000 home, transfer halted amid execution flaws

April 20, 2026
© 2026 Conviction.
  • Home
  • Law & Justice
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Ask The Expert
  • Get In Touch

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Powered by
►
Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
None
►
Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
None
►
Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
None
►
Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
None
►
Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
None
Powered by