The South Korean office of U.S. e-cigarette maker Juul Labs said in a statement their products did not contain THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, or vitamin E acetate, a substance used in some THC products. Those substances have been linked to e-cigarette-related lung illnesses in the United States.
Juul, 35% owned by Altria Group Inc, began selling its devices in South Korea in May.
KT&G Corp, a South Korean tobacco maker which sells Lil Vapor e-cigarettes, said it would cooperate with the government’s policies after results of the ongoing probe came out.
Since smoking was banned indoors at places like restaurants and cafés in 2015, South Korea become less tolerant of smokers. But e-cigarettes have been gaining popularity in the country’s $16 billion tobacco market since 2017.
E-cigarettes accounted for 13% of South Korea’s tobacco market by sales as of June, according to government data.
South Korea is the world’s No.2 market of heated vape products after Japan, worth $1.7 billion, according to Euromonitor, but liquid e-cigarettes are less popular.
The United States has already announced plans to remove flavored e-cigarettes from stores, citing alarming growth in teenage use of the products
India also discontinued the sale of e-cigarettes in September, warning of an “epidemic” among young people. Reuters