Yes, let's please do it in one thread. I was going nuts there, esp. because ECF was coming through very slowly this afternoon.
-The FDA is defining an e-cig as a tobacco product.. What makes an e-cig, an e-cig? If one were to remove any part(s) of this e-cig, at what point, if any, would it cease to be an e-cig?
This is where I think you may be going wrong. You are are assuming that the FDA intends to regulate ALL "electronic cigarettes." This is not so.
The fact that the PDF refers to "e-cigarettes" is a shorthand. The legal language in the proposal is very specific about the types of products that are regulated.
Once again, please take a look at the vigAcig: VitaCig Vitamin Electronic Cigarette
(I'm not promoting it, mind you. But it might save us some back-and-forth here in discussions.)
1) There's no e-liquid in the vitAcig which is derived from tobacco, or which contains anything derived from tobacco. (Trust me, there isn't.)
2) There are no parts on the vitAcig (like a battery or a carto) that can be used with a tobacco product - the whole thing is proprietary, right?
This is an example of something that we would all call an "e-cig"
but which is designed from the ground up to be completely free from FDA regulation as a tobacco product.
It does not contain any tobacco products, and it does not contain any "components or parts" that can be used with a "covered tobacco product."
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If a vendor sells an RDA, a Provari, and 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco) as part of a "kit," the combination is not a "covered tobacco product."
What's the difference between the vitAcig and the kit that contain an RDA, a Provari, and 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid has nothing in it derived from tobacco)?
The RDA and the Provari
are both "components or parts of tobacco products"
because they are "components or parts intended or anticipated for use with a covered tobacco products" (because you can use them with e-liquid that contains nic. derived from tobacco, and that really is the "intended or anticipated" use - as Zeller says in that teleconference).
However you
can't use the vitAcig or the vitAcig batteries/sealed cartOs/etc. as part of a covered tobacco product. (Not without tearing them apart, etc. And it's not "anticipated" that the purchaser of a vitAcig will put it into a vice, cut it apart, and sotter it back together after putting nic. juice in the cartridge
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- They also want to regulate the components and parts of a tobacco product.. What is a component or part? At one point in the video, as well as implied in the above, Zeller states that it does not mean it has to contain tobacco or nicotine..
Correct. But the 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco) is not part of a tobacco product, because it can be
only be used in a setup which is not itself a tobacco product, right?
Let's take that e-liquid, drip it into a kayfun, and put the kayfun on a provari. Is that setup a "tobacco product?" No.
Is the kayfun and the provari a "component or part of a covered tobacco product?" Yes! Because they are "anticipated or intended for use" as a component or part of a covered tobacco product (as Zeller says at 14:00 in the teleconference that you cited).
But the provari and the kayfun are not
themselves tobacco products.
Again, just because something can be
regulated as a tobacco product doesn't not mean that it
is a tobacco product.
In the case of vaping, I've argued (and CASAA seems to agree) that "components or parts" include: drip tips, cartridges, cartomizers, atomizers, RDAs, RTAs (gennys), tanks, clearos (vivis are clearos) tankomizers, EGO and other special-purpose batteries, APVs and mechs. I might have left something off that list, but you get the idea.
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[from pp.6-7] "Products that meet the statutory definition of "tobacco products" can include currently marketed products such as certain dissolvables, gels, hookah tobacco, electronic cigarettes, cigars, and pipe tobacco. Components and parts of tobacco products, but not their related accessories, would also be included in the scope of this proposed rule. Components and parts are included as part of a finished tobacco product or intended for consumer use in the consumption of a tobacco product. Components and parts that would be covered under this proposal include those items sold separately or as part of kits sold or distributed for consumer use or further manufacturing or included as part of a finished tobacco product. Such examples would include air/smoke filters, tubes, papers, pouches, or flavorings used for any of the proposed deemed tobacco products (such as flavored hookah charcoals and hookah flavor enhancers) or cartridges for e-cigarettes."
So let's go through every word.
"Products that meet the statutory definition of "tobacco products" can include currently marketed products such as certain dissolvables, gels, hookah tobacco, electronic cigarettes, cigars, and pipe tobacco."
That first sentence is intended to be helpful, but it is not
legal language. For example, a "gel" that contains nothing derived from tobacco will not be regulated. (They are not intending to regulate hair gel, right?)
That's why we shouldn't assume that
all "e-cigs" are regulated (again, back to the vitAcig:
VitaCig Vitamin Electronic Cigarette
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[continuing from PDF, pp.6-7] "Components and parts of tobacco products, but not their related accessories, would also be included in the scope of this proposed rule. Components and parts are included as part of a finished tobacco product or intended for consumer use in the consumption of a tobacco product. Components and parts that would be covered under this proposal include those items sold separately or as part of kits sold or distributed for consumer use or further manufacturing or included as part of a finished tobacco product."
Is 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco) a "component or part of a finished tobacco product?"
Only if we assume that ALL e-cigs are "finished tobacco products."
But as the vitAcig example shows, there are some things out there that we would call "electronic cigarettes" which are not "finished tobacco products."
Just like there are some "gels" which are not going to be regulated ... hair gel, for example
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[continuing from PDF, pp.6-7] "Such examples would include air/smoke filters, tubes, papers, pouches, or flavorings used for any of the proposed deemed tobacco products (such as flavored hookah charcoals and hookah flavor enhancers) or cartridges for e-cigarettes."
You bolded the word "flavorings" here, right?
Well, we have to be careful about flavorings
for what?
Is the "kit" that we have with a provari, a kayfun, and 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco) a "deemed tobacco product?"
Well, yes, after all ... it's an e-cigarette, right?
<bzzzt!> NO!! Got ya

Just kiddin
Just because we call it an "e-cig" doesn't mean it's regulated as a "covered tobacco product. Isn't the vitAcig an "e-cig?"
Could they regulate some kind of "flavor base" sold which is intended to be mixed with high-concentration nic, to create e-liquid? Yes, that probably would be a "component or part."
But that's not the same as 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco), and which is intended to be vaped "as is."
If you DIY, you know that nic. changes the flavor. And flavor concentrate is NOT 0% e-liquid. (You don't vape the flavor concentrate by itself, right?)
Do they intend to treat all water-soluble flavorings as "components or parts" of "covered tobacco products" ? Probably not, based on practicality. THey aren't going to be regulating 186xx batteries and rubber O-rings as "componenets or parts" of "covered tobacco products' either. They could. But they're not crazy.
What if a vendor sold 0% e-liquid (assume this e-liquid contains nothing derived from tobacco) that could be vaped by itself,
but also included extra flavoring so the purchaser could mix it with high-concentration nicotine base?
That probably wouldn't fly,
because the flavoring was "anticipated or intended for use with a covered tobacco product." (As in the part of the teleconference you cited at 14:00).
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And why didn't Zeller or the FDA mention anything specifically about the other half of the non-cigalike e-cig industry, instead choosing to mention only "e-cigs" & "cartridges"? Are they truly not aware of all the other stuff, as Dimitris relayed from the SFATA conference? The FDA really has no idea about the thousands of other non-cigalike products? All the PVs, all the juice, all the toppers? Surely the FDA has internet access & could conduct a simple search & find all sorts of info & photos of this $1 billion part of this industry, no?
I have no clue what the FDA knows. Although I was surprised by some of the parts in that section on pp.6-7 that apply to hookah use. They seem to have a pretty good grasp of that, so far as I can tell.
They seem to be doing a pretty good job of dividing and confusing the vaping community, don't they? We have a lot of disinformation and ambiguity floating around.
Is that bad? Not for the FDA.
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The bottom line is, and I've stated this before, this proposal is very vague, undefined & open to public interpretation.. And it's my sense that this was done intentionally.. They were extremely careful on how they worded this, or more aptly, how they didn't word this.. which I'm sure is part of the reason why it took so long to come out..
It is, but remember that the statute - not the PDF - determines the outer limits of their authority.
They can't say "Well, we're regulating gels," and then start regulating hair gel.
Can I promise you that they won't go completely insane and try to treat 186xx batteries, rubber O-rings, and kanthal wire as "components or parts" of "covered tobacco products?"
Well, no. I can't guarantee that. But it's unlikely.