Standardised tobacco packs ‘costly and disruptive’ for local shops, says ACS


The Association of Convenience Stores (ACS) has made its submission to the Department of Health consultation opposing the introduction of standardised tobacco packaging in England, Wales and Scotland.

The submission sets out concerns about the impact of service times, profitability and highlights concerns that it will fuel the illegal trade.

ACS chief executive, James Lowman, said: “We urge ministers not to impose yet another costly and disruptive regulatory burden on local shops. This proposal will make it slower and costlier to manage stock and serve customers.

“A decision to press ahead with standardised packaging for tobacco would create disruption and uncertainty at a time the tobacco display ban is yet to be fully implemented or its effects measured.

“Ministers should wait and carefully assess the impact of standardised packaging when it is imposed in Australia later this year. This is the only way to have reliable data on the scale of the business impact. Failure to do anything else would be irresponsible.”

The Department of Health Consultation closes on 9 July.

Source: ACS

Similar News Items

Comment on this story:

*

Your comment:

Please type the characters shown below:

TalkingRetail.com, Metropolis Business Publishing, 6th Floor Davis House, 2 Robert Street, Croydon, CR0 1QQ
TalkingRetail.com and Independent Retail News are published by Metropolis International Group Ltd, 140 Wales Farm Road, London, W3 6UG.
Registered in England no. 2916515

v3.0