Famous disposable brand withdrawn - contained too much e-liquid

The Public Health Agency of Sweden withdraws the authorisation for the disposable models Nasty Fix 2.0. The reason for this is that checks have shown that the products contain approximately 1 millilitre more e-liquid than is permitted in a disposable model. The limit is 2 millilitres under the EU Tobacco Products Directive (TPD). 

Malaysian Nasty juice has long been present in Swedish vejpshoppar, mainly in the form of short fills and ready-made nicotine juices. The company's disposable models were first registered in Sweden in 2020 and along with other nicotine liquids, the company has registered 67 products for sale in Sweden. However, only the disposable models called Nasty Fix 2.0 are affected by the sales ban. In total, there are 13 registered products. Nasty Fix 2.0 may, according to the Public Health Authority's decision, no longer be sold in Sweden from 13 March, reports Expressen.

4292 single-use models registered

There are currently 4292 different variants of disposable models (including flavour variations and different nicotine strengths) registered with the Public Health Agency. Registration is a legal requirement and all models must be registered with their list of ingredients and warnings according to European Chemicals Agency regulations. Only e-liquids that contain nicotine need to be registered with the Public Health Agency - i.e. not nicotine-free short-fills. Today, the Agency's register contains 17917 individual products.

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