Alimentation Couche-Tard, Parkland challenge Health Canada nicotine pouch rules
Simon Scott, Parkland's vice-president of corporate affairs, said in a statement that the company's stores have "a proven track record of responsibly and safely selling age-restricted products, including alcohol, tobacco, and lottery tickets. (Nicotine replacement therapies) are no different."
Scott said that removing them from convenience stores won't stop youth from accessing them, and instead "hinder access by adult customers who are trying to reduce their use of tobacco."
Health Canada declined to make anyone available for an interview due to "the complexity of the file."
Federal Health Minister Mark Holland announced in August that the sale of Zonnic pouches would be restricted to pharmacies due to concerns over "recreational use by people who do not smoke, and, in particular, youth under 18 years of age."
Holland's ministerial order also banned advertising "that could be appealing to youth," and limited nicotine pouch flavours to mint and menthol.
"Nicotine pouch flavours like berry frost or tropical breeze are not going to be allowed to be sold anywhere," Holland said in an interview with The Canadian Press in August. "What I'm hoping to see is for these products to be used for what they're intended to do—to help people stop smoking—and to stop dead in its tracks the explosion of these products that we're seeing in youth."
Quebec and British Columbia both restricted the sales of Zonnic pouches before Holland's order, allowing sales only at pharmacies behind the counter.
In a statement issued after the new restrictions were announced, Imperial Tobacco called Holland's order "unprecedented."
Eric Gagnon, the company's vice-president of corporate and regulatory affairs, said it was an "extreme abuse of power" to impose the rules on the company's Zonnic pouches.
"These rules do not apply to any other smoking cessation product and singling out Zonnic is a personal attack on our company by Minister Holland and will only make it more difficult for adult smokers to quit," Gagnon said.
Gagnon said the new rules would lead to people buying illicit products widely available online.