2010 |
- Canada becomes first country to ban all flavours (except menthol) in cigarettes and cigarillos
- Manitoba, New Brunswick, and Saskatchewan ban smoking in vehicles with kids
- Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador and Northwest Territories increase tobacco tax
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2011 |
- Newfoundland and Labrador bans smoking in vehicles with kids
- Manitoba, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Northwest Territories increase tobacco taxes
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2012 |
- Canada increases required graphic warnings on cigarette packaging to cover 75% of the package front and back and adds a toll-free quitline number as part of the health warning
- Manitoba, Quebec and Nunavut increase tobacco taxes
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2013 |
- Canada, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador increase taxes on tobacco products
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2014 |
- Alberta bans smoking in vehicles with kids
- Canada, British Columbia, Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador and Northwest Territories increase tobacco taxes
- Vancouver restricts the use of e-cigarettes in public places
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2015 |
- Canada commits to the implementation of plain packaging for tobacco products
- Nova Scotia becomes the first jurisdiction in the world to ban flavoured tobacco, including menthol
- Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island increase taxes on tobacco products
- British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island adopt e-cigarette legislation banning use where smoking is banned, banning sales to minors, banning displays/advertising at retail, and banning sales where tobacco sales are banned (for Ontario, sales to minors in effect 2016, most other provisions in effect in 2018, ban on retail displays/ads in effect in 2020 )
- New Brunswick bans smoking on restaurants and bar patios, children’s playgrounds, sports fields, provincial parks and beaches
- Ontario bans smoking on patios, playgrounds and sports fields
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2016 |
- Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador increase tobacco taxes
- Quebec bans smoking in vehicles with children, on restaurant and bar patios, sport fields and children’s playgrounds
- Quebec bans flavoured tobacco, including menthol
- Lloydminster, Saskatchewan requires businesses to hold a license to sell tobacco or e-cigarettes, using the annual fee to support non-profit groups in their efforts to reduce tobacco use
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2017 |
- Canada bans menthol cigarettes and little cigars across the country
- Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut increase tobacco taxes
- Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador ban flavoured tobacco, including menthol
- Manitoba and Newfoundland and Labrador e-cigarette legislation come into effect
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2018 |
- Canada strengthens the Federal Tobacco Control Strategy with an additional ongoing investment of $18 million per year and increases taxes on tobacco products
- Federal government establishes objective of under 5% tobacco use by 2035
- Nova Scotia bans smoking on sports fields, children’s playgrounds, provincial parks, beaches
- Nunavut bans smoking on sports fields, children’s playgrounds and patios
- British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Yukon and the federal government increase tobacco taxes
- Saskatchewan bans smoking in all social housing units
- Canada extends menthol ban to all tobacco products across the country
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2019 |
- Canada implements the world’s best tobacco plain packaging regulations. The regulations also ban slims and superslims cigarettes and packaging, which are marketed in a way that specifically appeals to young women and girls
- British Columbia announces comprehensive strategy to reduce youth vaping
- Alberta increases tobacco taxes
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