Source: https://www.legislation.gov.au/Details/F2011L02766
Timestamp: 2018-04-26 22:47:43
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Details: F2011L02766
- F2011L02766
This Standard provides for a system of health warnings to increase consumer knowledge of the health effects relating to the use of tobacco products; to ensure the continuing effectiveness of health warnings on retail packaging of tobacco products and by ensuring the continuing effectiveness of health warnings on tobacco packaging, to encourage the cessation of the use of tobacco products and to discourage uptake or relapse.
F2011L02766
1.1 Name of information standard
1.5 Application of standard
1.6 Application of Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act 1997
1.7 Repeal of Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004
Part 2 Display of health warnings
Part 3 Health warnings — retail packaging for cigarettes and smoked tobacco products not mentioned in other Parts (first set of health warnings)
Part 4 Health warnings — retail packaging for cigarettes and smoked tobacco products not mentioned in other Parts (second set of health warnings)
Part 5 Health warnings — retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes)
Part 6 Health warnings — retail packaging that is cigar tubes
Part 7 Health warnings — retail packaging for bidis
Part 8 Health warnings — retail packaging for smokeless tobacco
Part 9 How to display health warnings
Competition and Consumer (Tobacco) Information Standard 20111
I, DAVID BRADBURY, Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer, make this information standard under section 134 of Schedule 2 to the Competition and Consumer Act 2010.
1.1 Name of information standard 5
1.4 Purpose 8
1.5 Application of standard 8
1.6 Application of Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act 1997 9
1.7 Repeal of Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004 9
2.1 Supply of tobacco product 10
2.2 Outer surfaces 10
3.1 Outline of Part 3 14
3.2 Smoking harms unborn babies 15
3.3 Smoking causes blindness 16
3.4 Smoking causes lung cancer 17
3.5 Smoking causes mouth cancer 18
3.6 Smoking causes peripheral vascular disease 19
3.7 Smoking causes emphysema 20
3.8 Quitting will improve your health 21
4.1 Outline of Part 4 22
4.2 Smoking damages your gums and teeth 23
4.3 Smoking causes throat cancer 24
4.4 Smoking causes heart disease 25
4.5 Smoking causes kidney and bladder cancer 26
4.6 Smoking kills 27
4.7 Smoking doubles your risk of stroke 28
4.8 Don’t let others breathe your smoke 29
5.1 Outline of Part 5 30
5.2 Cigar smoking causes mouth cancer 31
5.3 Cigar smoking causes lung cancer 32
5.4 Cigar smoking is not a safe alternative 33
5.5 Cigar smoking causes throat cancer 34
5.6 Cigar smoking damages your teeth and gums 35
6.1 Outline of Part 6 36
6.2 Warning statements 36
7.1 Outline of Part 7 37
7.2 Warning statements 37
8.1 Outline of Part 8 38
8.2 Warning statements 38
9.1 Outline of Part 9 39
9.2 Health warnings not to be obscured etc 39
9.3 Graphics 39
9.4 Display of parts of graphics and Quitline logo 39
9.5 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — general 40
9.6 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes) 41
9.7 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — cigar tubes and retail packaging for bidis and smokeless tobacco 42
9.8 Use of adhesive labels 43
9.9 Transparent wrappers 43
Division 3 Text requirements
9.10 Warning statement 44
9.11 Explanatory message 45
9.12 Information message 45
Division 4 Displaying health warnings on surfaces
Subdivision 1 Front outer surfaces 46
9.13 Front outer surface of cigarette packs and general vertical retail packaging 46
9.14 Front outer surface of general horizontal retail packaging 47
9.15 Front outer surface of small cylinders 47
9.16 Front outer surface of retail packaging for cigar tubes 48
9.17 Front outer surface of retail packaging for bidis 48
9.18 Front outer surface of retail packaging for smokeless tobacco 48
Subdivision 2 Back outer surfaces 48
9.19 Back outer surface of cigarette packs and vertical cigarette cartons 48
9.20 Back outer surface of horizontal cigarette cartons 49
9.21 Back outer surface of pouches 49
9.22 Back outer surface of large cylinders 49
9.23 Back outer surface of small cylinders 50
9.24 Back outer surface of retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes) and other general retail packaging 50
9.25 Back outer surface of retail packaging for retail sale of smokeless tobacco 51
Subdivision 3 Other outer surfaces 51
9.26 Side outer surface of cigarette packs 51
9.27 Side outer surface of cigarette cartons 51
9.28 Inside flap of pouches 51
9.29 Base of large cylinder 52
9.30 Side outer surface of other retail packaging 52
This information standard is the Competition and Consumer (Tobacco) Information Standard 2011.
This information standard commences on 1 January 2012.
(1) In this information standard:
Note See also the definition of container.
container includes (without limitation) any pack, carton, box, tin, packet, bag, pouch, tube or other container that is used as the retail packaging of a tobacco product.
explanatory message means a message described as an explanatory message in this information standard.
graphic means an image described as a graphic in this information standard.
health warning means any of the following:
(a) a warning statement;
(b) a graphic;
(c) an explanatory message;
(d) an information message.
information message means a message described as an information message in this information standard.
insert means any thing (other than a tobacco product) placed inside packaging (within the ordinary meaning of the word), but does not include the lining of a cigarette pack if the lining complies with the requirements of the Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011.
large cylinder means retail packaging that is a cylindrical container and that is at least 41 mm in height.
onsert means any thing affixed or otherwise attached to packaging (within the ordinary meaning of the word), but does not include the lining of a cigarette pack if the lining complies with the requirements of the Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011.
Note A sound chip embedded in the cardboard of a cigarette pack is an example of an onsert.
pouch means retail packaging that:
small cylinder means retail packaging that is a cylindrical container and that is less than 41 mm in height.
smokeless tobacco means a tobacco product that is manufactured to be used for sucking, chewing or snuffing.
supply, when used as a verb, includes:
(a) in relation to goods — supply (including re‑supply) by way of sale, exchange, lease, hire or hire‑purchase by a person in Australia to another person in Australia; and
(b) in relation to services — provide, grant or confer;
Note Loose tobacco for roll‑your‑own cigarettes is an example of processed tobacco. A cigar or cigarette is an example of a product that contains tobacco.
variant name, for a tobacco product, means the name used to distinguish that kind of tobacco product from other tobacco products that are supplied under the same brand, business or company name, by reference to one or more of the following:
(e) being sold in retail packaging containing different numbers of pieces;
(f) being of different length or mass.
warning statement means a statement described as a warning statement in this information standard.
(2) A reference in this information standard to a cylinder or a cylindrical container includes a container that is, in one plane, elliptical, rather than circular, in cross‑section.
(3) Retail packaging is vertical if:
(a) the largest brand name on the outer surfaces is read; and
(b) the longest edge of that outer surface is vertical when the brand name is read.
(4) Retail packaging is horizontal if:
(b) the longest edge of that outer surface is horizontal when the brand name is read.
(5) If retail packaging is square, the packaging may be treated as vertical or horizontal.
(6) The Quitline logo is:
Note The Quitline logo is partially transparent. Subsection 9.4 (3) gives an example of how to display the logo to allow the graphic to be seen underneath it.
The purpose of this information standard is to provide for a system of warning statements, explanatory messages, graphics and information messages:
(a) to increase consumer knowledge of health effects relating to the use of tobacco products; and
(b) to ensure the continuing effectiveness of health warnings on the retail packaging of tobacco products; and
(c) by ensuring the continuing effectiveness of health warnings on the retail packaging of tobacco products, to encourage the cessation of the use of tobacco products, and to discourage uptake or relapse.
Note A tobacco product that is supplied in retail packaging must display health warnings which comply with this information standard.
(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), this information standard applies to a tobacco product that is supplied on or after 1 January 2012.
(a) a tobacco product is supplied during the period commencing on 1 January 2012 and ending on 30 November 2012; and
(b) the tobacco product is of a kind that was not subject to the Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004, as in force immediately before 1 January 2012;
the retail packaging of the tobacco product is not required to comply with the requirements of this information standard.
(b) the tobacco product is of a kind that was subject to the Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004, as in force immediately before 1 January 2012; and
(c) the retail packaging of the tobacco product complies with the requirements set out in those Regulations;
the retail packaging of the tobacco product is taken to comply with the requirements of this information standard.
Note There will be 2 systems of labelling tobacco products in operation in the period commencing on 1 January 2012 and ending on 30 November 2012:
(a) the system set out in this information standard; and
(b) the system set out in the Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004.
During that period, suppliers of tobacco products that were subject to the 2004 Regulations may continue to supply those tobacco products in compliance with those Regulations, or may supply those tobacco products in compliance with this information standard.
(4) On and after 1 December 2012, this information standard applies to all tobacco products.
On and after 1 December 2012, this information standard is exempt from the operation of the Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act 1997.
Note See section 46 of that Act.
On 1 December 2012, the following legislative instruments are repealed:
(a) Statutory Rules 2004 No. 264;
(b) Legislative Instrument F2005L02919;
(c) Legislative Instrument F2007L00233.
Note The Trade Practices (Consumer Product Information Standards) (Tobacco) Regulations 2004 prescribed a consumer product information standard. Schedule 7 to the Trade Practices Amendment (Australian Consumer Law) Act (No. 2) 2010 provides that that standard continues in force after 1 January 2011 as if it were an information standard.
Note The retail packaging must comply with this information standard.
(2) For a single cigar supplied by way of retail sale:
Note Subsection 9.9 (4) relates to the use of wrappers as the retail packaging for a single cigar.
2.2 Outer surfaces
(1) The table identifies:
(a) the outer surfaces of retail packaging; and
(b) the health warnings that are required to be displayed on those outer surfaces.
The surface that includes the front of the flip-top lid
The surface directly opposite the front surface
One of the 2 longest of the other surfaces
One of the largest surfaces
The largest surface that is not overlapped by the flap of the pouch
The surface directly opposite the front surface, including the flap of the pouch
The part of the surface that is covered by the flap is not part of the back outer surface
(a) the inside surface of the flap; or
(b) the surface of the pouch that is under the flap when the flap is closed
The curved surface that extends one‑sixth of the circumference of the retail package each side of the vertical centre line (the front line) of the largest brand name appearing on the surface
The curved surface that extends one‑sixth of the circumference of the retail package each side of a vertical line directly opposite the front line
The outer surface of the base
The outer surface of the lid
Retail packaging for cigars, other than a cigar tube:
(a) if the packaging is not cylindrical
(b) if the packaging is cylindrical
The outer surface of the tube
Retail packaging for bidis
Retail packaging for smokeless tobacco
Other retail packaging not mentioned in this table
(a) the retail packaging has more than 2 outer surfaces; and
One of those largest outer surfaces other than the front and back outer surfaces
(b) the largest outer surface other than the front and back has a minimum surface area of 2400 mm2
(2) If a section of this information standard illustrates a layout for the display of a health warning on an outer surface:
(a) the outer edges of the illustration are the edges of the outer surface, unless the retail packaging is a small cylinder; and
(b) a health warning within a bordered area of the illustration must extend as close as possible to the edges of the bordered area; and
(c) health warnings that are shown in the illustration with a common border must join without space between them.
(a) the warning statement must extend as close as possible to the top and side edges of the outer surface; and
(b) the graphic must extend as close as possible to the side edges of the outer surface; and
(c) the warning statement and the graphic must join without space between them.
3.1 Outline of Part 3
(1) Each section in this Part sets out a combination of:
(a) warning statements; and
(b) graphics; and
(c) explanatory messages; and
(d) information messages.
(2) A combination must be displayed on retail packaging for:
(a) cigarettes; and
(b) smoked tobacco products that are not mentioned in Parts 5 to 8;
as required by Parts 2 and 9.
Note Part 4 includes more combinations for this retail packaging.
3.2 Smoking harms unborn babies
(1) The warning statement is:
(2) The graphic for the front outer surface is:
(3) The graphic for the back outer surface is the graphic for the front outer surface with an overlay of the Quitline logo.
(4) The explanatory message is:
Smoking during pregnancy reduces blood flow in the placenta and limits the oxygen and nutrients that reach the growing baby. Smoking increases the risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, premature birth, problems during the birth or the baby having a smaller brain and body.
You CAN quit smoking. Call Quitline 13 7848, talk to your doctor or pharmacist, or visit www.quitnow.gov.au
(5) The information message is:
Tobacco smoke contains a toxic mix of chemicals that cause disease and early death in children and non-smoking adults exposed to the smoke.
3.3 Smoking causes blindness
Smoking damages your eyes causing blindness.
Want to talk about quitting? Call Quitline 13 7848, talk to your doctor or pharmacist, or visit www.quitnow.gov.au
The toxic chemicals in tobacco smoke can go everywhere that your blood flows, causing harm all over your body.
3.4 Smoking causes lung cancer
(3) The graphic for the back outer surface is:
with an overlay of the Quitline logo.
(5) The explanatory message is:
Bryan was a teenager when he started smoking. Like many others he never thought it would kill him. He died aged 34, just 47 days after he was diagnosed with lung cancer. He wanted others to know – ‘this is what happens to you when you smoke’.
(6) The information message is:
10 drags per smoke x 20 smokes per day x 365 days per year = 73,000 toxic drags per year.
3.5 Smoking causes mouth cancer
Smoking is a major cause of cancers of the mouth, throat, and voice box (larynx). Treatment can include surgery that may deform your face and neck or leave permanent scars. It can also leave you with problems breathing, eating, speaking, and coping with life.
Want help with quitting? Call Quitline 13 7848, talk to your doctor or pharmacist, or visit www.quitnow.gov.au
Inhaling tobacco smoke releases benzopyrenes into your body. Benzopyrenes damage how your body protects itself from getting cancer.
3.6 Smoking causes peripheral vascular disease
Smoking narrows and blocks your blood vessels, reducing blood and oxygen supply to your extremities (feet, legs, hands, arms). Over time this can result in pain, open sores that don’t heal and gangrene. Gangrene leads to amputation.
Want advice on quitting? Call Quitline 13 7848, talk to your doctor or pharmacist, or visit www.quitnow.gov.au
The toxic chemicals from tobacco smoke can be found in your breath, urine and blood when you smoke.
3.7 Smoking causes emphysema
Smoking causes most cases of emphysema. Emphysema is the slow and permanent destruction of the airsacs in your lungs. Over time it becomes harder and harder to breathe. You slowly start to die from lack of air.
3.8 Quitting will improve your health
Long term smokers can and do quit. Quitting smoking at any age has immediate and long term health benefits. Compared with a smoker, quitting today will halve your risk of:
· heart disease (after one year);
· mouth and throat cancer (after five years); and
· lung cancer (after ten years).
There are no known health benefits in smoking products that taste lighter, milder or less harsh. The smoke still contains a toxic mix of chemicals that cause death and disease.
4.1 Outline of Part 4
Note Part 3 includes more combinations for this retail packaging.
4.2 Smoking damages your gums and teeth
Smoking causes inflammation of the gum and other tissue around your teeth (periodontitis). Symptoms can include gum redness, swelling, bleeding, infection and pain. The gum, bones and other tissue supporting your teeth can be destroyed resulting in tooth loss.
The toxic chemicals in tobacco smoke damage your blood vessels, damage your body’s cells and attack your immune system.
4.3 Smoking causes throat cancer
John was a smoker. He got cancer of the larynx (voice box). His voice box was removed. He had to learn to talk again. Now he can only breathe through the hole in his neck.
BDE (1,3 Butadiene) is found in large amounts in tobacco smoke. BDE causes leukaemia and other cancers.
4.4 Smoking causes heart disease
Smoking causes heart disease by damaging the blood vessels and blood supply to your heart. Smokers have more heart attacks, repeat heart attacks and angina than non-smokers. Quitting today will halve your risk of heart disease caused by smoking after one year.
Inhaling tobacco smoke releases hydrogen cyanide into your body, a chemical that is very toxic to humans. It can damage parts of your body including your heart and lungs.
4.5 Smoking causes kidney and bladder cancer
The cancer-causing chemicals you inhale with each puff go through your kidneys and bladder as your body tries to get rid of them in your urine. This makes smoking a major cause of kidney and bladder cancer. Blood in the urine is one of the most common symptoms.
Inhaling tobacco smoke releases benzene into your body. Benzene causes leukaemia, increases the risk of other cancers and is believed to be dangerous at any level of exposure.
4.6 Smoking kills
Don’t think it won’t happen to you – half of lifetime smokers are killed by their smoking. How will you tell your loved ones if you get a disease caused by smoking? Imagine their distress, pain and suffering if smoking kills you.
The chemicals in tobacco smoke build up to high levels in your body over time. This increases your risk of death and disease the longer and more you smoke.
4.7 Smoking doubles your risk of stroke
Cinthia, a smoker for 25 yrs, had a stroke aged 39. The stroke damaged her ability to speak and move parts of her body. She says ‘The hardest part was relying on my kids to look after me – I should be looking after them.’ Don’t think it can’t happen to you – younger people suffer strokes too.
Inhaling even small amounts of the toxic chemicals in tobacco smoke can trigger sudden blood clots, heart attacks and strokes.
4.8 Don’t let others breathe your smoke
There is no safe amount of second hand smoke. Breathing even a little can be dangerous. It causes illnesses like pneumonia, middle ear infections and asthma attacks in children to be worse. It also causes heart disease and lung cancer in adults.
You CAN quit smoking. Call Quitline 13 7848, talk to your doctor or pharmacist or visit www.quitnow.gov.au
5.1 Outline of Part 5
(c) explanatory messages.
(2) A combination must be displayed on retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes) as required by Parts 2 and 9.
Note Part 6 applies to cigar tubes.
5.2 Cigar smoking causes mouth cancer
(2) The graphic is:
(3) The explanatory message is:
Cigar smoking causes cancers of the tongue, lip and other parts of your mouth. You can get these cancers without inhaling. Treatment can include surgery that may deform your face and neck or leave permanent scars.
5.3 Cigar smoking causes lung cancer
Cigar smoking causes lung cancer, whether you inhale or not. Most people who get lung cancer die from it.
5.4 Cigar smoking is not a safe alternative
Smoking cigars causes death and disease whether you inhale or not. It increases your risk of heart disease, respiratory diseases and cancers of the mouth, throat and lung.
5.5 Cigar smoking causes throat cancer
5.6 Cigar smoking damages your teeth and gums
6.1 Outline of Part 6
(1) This Part sets out warning statements to be displayed on cigar tubes.
(2) A warning statement must be displayed on a cigar tube as required by Parts 2 and 9.
Note Part 5 applies to retail packaging for cigars other than cigar tubes.
6.2 Warning statements
Each of the following is a warning statement:
7.1 Outline of Part 7
(1) This Part sets out warning statements.
(2) A warning statement must be displayed on the retail packaging for bidis as required by Parts 2 and 9.
7.2 Warning statements
BIDI SMOKING CAUSES MOUTH AND THROAT CANCER
BIDI SMOKING CAUSES LUNG CANCER
BIDIS ARE NOT A SAFE ALTERNATIVE
BIDI SMOKING CAUSES EMPHYSEMA
BIDI SMOKING KILLS
8.1 Outline of Part 8
(2) A warning statement must be displayed on the retail packaging for smokeless tobacco as required by Parts 2 and 9.
8.2 Warning statements
THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS CANCER CAUSING AGENTS
THIS PRODUCT MAY BE HARMFUL TO YOUR HEALTH
Note The supply of a smokeless tobacco product must comply with Consumer Protection Notice No 10 of 1991, made under the Trade Practices Act 1974, which imposes a permanent ban on chewing tobacco and snuffs intended for oral use.
9.1 Outline of Part 9
This Part sets out requirements for the display of health warnings on retail packaging.
9.2 Health warnings not to be obscured etc
(1) A health warning that is required to be displayed on retail packaging must not be obscured or obliterated in any way at the time of supply of the tobacco product.
The retail packaging may be covered by a plastic or other wrapper, which must not obscure or obliterate the warning statement, explanatory message, graphic or information message.
(2) A health warning on retail packaging (other than a cigarette carton or a cigar tube) must not be likely to be obliterated, removed or rendered permanently unreadable when the retail packaging on which it is displayed is opened in the normal way.
(3) If retail packaging is permitted by the Tobacco Plain Packaging Regulations 2011 to have a tear strip, a tear strip that complies with those Regulations is taken not to obscure or obliterate a health warning.
(1) A graphic that is to be displayed on retail packaging must not be distorted.
(2) A graphic may be cropped if:
(a) it is necessary to do so to fit the graphic on to the retail packaging; and
(b) the overall effect of the graphic is not affected by the cropping.
9.4 Display of parts of graphics and Quitline logo
(1) If a section of this information standard displays a graphic that shows text or numbers, the text or numbers may be placed in a different position only if:
(a) the text or numbers are completely contained within the image or images in the graphic; and
(b) the overall effect of the graphic is not affected by the new position of the text or numbers.
(2) If a graphic displayed in a section of this information standard consists of a larger and a smaller image, the smaller image may be placed in a different position only if:
(a) the smaller image is displayed entirely within the area of the larger image; and
(b) the overall effect of the graphic is not affected by the new position of the smaller image.
Note Subsection 3.4 (2) displays a graphic that consists of a larger and a smaller image.
(3) If the Quitline logo is to be displayed on a graphic, the overlay may be placed in any position if:
(a) the overlay is completely contained within the graphic; and
(b) the overall effect of the graphic is not affected by the position of the overlay.
(4) The Quitline logo is partially transparent, and this is an example of how it is to be displayed to allow the graphic to be seen underneath it:
9.5 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — general
(1) This section applies to combinations of warning statements, explanatory messages, graphics and information messages for the following retail packaging:
(a) a cigarette pack;
(b) a cigarette carton;
(c) a pouch;
(d) a cylinder;
(e) any other retail packaging to which section 9.6 or 9.7 does not apply.
(2) Parts 3 and 4 contain sets of combinations.
Period for display of combinations in Part 3
(3) Combinations in Part 3 are the only combinations to be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the period commencing on 1 January 2012 and ending on 30 November 2012.
(4) Combinations in Part 3 are the only combinations to be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the first 8 months of a year (an even-numbered year) commencing on:
(b) 1 December in each second subsequent year.
(5) Combinations in Part 3 must be displayed in rotation on retail packaging supplied during an even-numbered year so that each combination is displayed as nearly as possible on equal numbers of the retail packaging of each kind of tobacco product displaying combinations in Part 3.
Period for display of combinations in Part 4
(6) Combinations in Part 4 are the only combinations to be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the first 8 months of a year (an odd-numbered year) commencing on:
(a) 1 December 2013; or
(7) Combinations in Part 4 must be displayed in rotation on retail packaging supplied during an odd-numbered year so that each combination is displayed as nearly as possible on equal numbers of the retail packaging of each kind of tobacco product displaying combinations in Part 4.
Period for display of any required combination
(8) In the period of 4 months beginning on 1 August in an even-numbered year or an odd-numbered year, retail packaging may display any combination of warning statements, explanatory messages, graphics and information messages that is required by Part 3 or 4.
(9) Tobacco products are of different kinds if they are sold under different brand names.
(10) Tobacco products are of different kinds if they are sold under different variant names.
9.6 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes)
(1) This section applies to combinations of warning statements, explanatory messages and graphics for retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube).
(2) Combinations must be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the period commencing on 1 January 2012 and ending on 30 November 2012.
(3) Combinations must be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the period of 24 months (a relevant period) commencing on:
(4) Combinations must be displayed in rotation on retail packaging supplied during a relevant period so that each combination is displayed as nearly as possible on equal numbers of the retail packaging of each kind of tobacco product.
(5) Tobacco products are of different kinds if they are sold under different brand names.
(6) Tobacco products are of different kinds if they are sold under different variant names.
9.7 Health warnings to be displayed in rotation — cigar tubes and retail packaging for bidis and smokeless tobacco
(1) This section applies to warning statements for the following retail packaging:
(a) a cigar tube;
(b) retail packaging for bidis;
(c) retail packaging for smokeless tobacco.
(2) Warning statements must be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the period commencing on 1 January 2012 and ending on 30 November 2012.
(3) Warning statements must be displayed on retail packaging supplied during the period of 24 months (a relevant period) commencing on:
(4) Warning statements must be displayed in rotation on retail packaging supplied during a relevant period so that each warning statement is displayed as nearly as possible on equal numbers of the retail packaging of each kind of tobacco product.
9.8 Use of adhesive labels
(1) A health warning that is required by this information standard to be displayed on a cigarette pack or a cigarette carton must be printed on the pack or carton.
(2) A health warning that is required by this information standard to be displayed on retail packaging other than a cigarette pack or cigarette carton must be:
(a) printed on the retail packaging; or
(b) printed on an adhesive label that is affixed to the retail packaging.
(3) For paragraph (2) (b), an adhesive label must:
(a) comply with this Part in all respects other than as specifically set out in this section; and
(b) be affixed to the outer surface of the retail packaging on which the message that it bears is required to be printed; and
(c) be fastened firmly to the retail packaging so as not to be easily removable.
(4) For paragraph (3) (c), in determining whether a label is easily removable, regard must be had to:
(a) the expected life‑span of the retail packaging; and
(b) whether the label can be removed without damaging either the label or the retail packaging.
9.9 Transparent wrappers
Wrapper covering retail packaging
(1) Subsection (2) applies to retail packaging that is a plastic or other wrapper that covers any retail packaging of a tobacco product.
(a) the wrapper is totally transparent and not coloured; and
(b) the items of retail packaging covered by the wrapper are all of the same kind; and
(c) the items of retail packaging covered by the wrapper are arranged so that:
(i) only the front outer surface of an item is visible at one side of the wrapper, and only the back outer surface of an item is visible at the opposite side; or
(ii) only the front outer surface of an item is visible at one end of the wrapper, and only the back outer surface of an item is visible at the opposite end;
the wrapper is taken to comply with this information standard, and the requirements in this information standard relating to the display of health warnings do not apply to it.
Note Paragraph (c) permits items of retail packaging to be arranged in ‘ranks’ or in ‘files’.
Wrapper covering single cigar
(3) Subsection (4) applies to retail packaging that is a plastic or other wrapper that directly covers a single cigar.
(4) If the wrapper is totally transparent and not coloured, the wrapper is taken to comply with this information standard, and the requirements in this information standard relating to the display of health warnings do not apply to it.
Note Subsection 2.1 (2) sets out requirements about the retail packaging for a single cigar.
(5) For subsections (2) and (4), a wrapper is taken to be totally transparent and not coloured even if any of the following appears on or as part of the wrapper:
(a) a tear strip that complies with the Tobacco Plain Packaging Regulations 2011;
(b) bar coding;
(c) a solid black rectangle to conceal bar coding on an item of retail packaging covered by the wrapper;
(d) labelling information required by a law of the Commonwealth or a State or Territory;
(e) a mark used only for the purpose of the automated manufacture of the wrapper.
9.10 Warning statement
Front outer surface
(1) The text of a warning statement on the front outer surface of retail packaging must be:
(a) in the type face known as Helvetica; and
(b) in upper case and bold type; and
(c) white on a black background; and
(d) clear and legible; and
(e) in the same point size throughout the statement; and
(f) of such a size that the text fills, as nearly as possible, the background on which it is displayed.
Back outer surface
(2) The text of a warning statement on the back outer surface of retail packaging must be:
(c) for retail packaging other than packaging for smokeless tobacco — white on a red background; and
(d) for retail packaging for smokeless tobacco — white on a black background; and
(e) clear and legible; and
(f) in the same point size throughout the statement; and
(g) of such a size that the text fills, as nearly as possible, the background on which it is displayed.
9.11 Explanatory message
The text of an explanatory message must be:
(b) in upper and lower case, and with bold weight and normal weight, as required by the section of this information standard that sets out the text; and
9.12 Information message
(1) The text of an information message must be:
(b) in upper and lower case, and with bold weight and normal weight, as required by the provision of this information standard that sets out the text; and
(c) black on a yellow background; and
(e) in the same point size throughout the statement (other than the word ‘WARNING’, which must be in a point size twice as large as the rest of the text); and
(2) An information message must be displayed using this layout:
Subdivision 1 Front outer surfaces
9.13 Front outer surface of cigarette packs and general vertical retail packaging
(1) A warning statement and a graphic must cover at least 75% of the total area on the front outer surface of the following retail packaging:
(b) a vertical cigarette carton;
(c) vertical retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube);
(d) a vertical pouch;
(e) a large cylinder;
(f) any other vertical retail packaging that is not dealt with in another section of this Subdivision.
(a) the retail packaging is vertical retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube); and
(b) the area of the front outer surface is at least 250 cm2;
the warning statement and graphic must cover at least 188 cm2.
(3) The warning statement must cover the whole of the flip-top portion (if any).
(4) No part of the graphic is to be obscured when the flip-top lid (if any) is closed.
(5) The warning statement and graphic must be displayed using this layout:
9.14 Front outer surface of general horizontal retail packaging
(a) a horizontal cigarette carton;
(b) horizontal retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube);
(c) a horizontal pouch;
(d) any other horizontal retail packaging that is not dealt with in another section of this Subdivision.
(a) the retail packaging is horizontal retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube); and
(3) The graphic and warning statement must be displayed using one of the following layouts:
9.15 Front outer surface of small cylinders
(1) A warning statement and a graphic on the front outer surface of a small cylinder must cover at least 60% of the total area.
(2) The warning statement and graphic must be displayed using this layout:
Note As noted in paragraph 2.2 (2) (a), the outer edges shown in this illustration are not the outer edges of the outer surface.
9.16 Front outer surface of retail packaging for cigar tubes
A warning statement on the front outer surface of a cigar tube must:
(a) cover at least 95% of the total length of the outer surface; and
(b) be positioned lengthwise along the retail packaging; and
(c) extend to at least 60% of the circumference of the outer surface.
9.17 Front outer surface of retail packaging for bidis
A warning statement on the front outer surface of retail packaging for bidis must:
(a) measure at least 50mm by 20mm; and
(b) be positioned lengthwise along the retail packaging.
9.18 Front outer surface of retail packaging for smokeless tobacco
A warning statement on the front outer surface of retail packaging for smokeless tobacco must cover at least 25% of the surface.
Subdivision 2 Back outer surfaces
9.19 Back outer surface of cigarette packs and vertical cigarette cartons
(1) A warning statement, a graphic and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of the following retail packaging:
must cover at least 90% of the total area.
(2) If the back outer surface has a fold line along which a flip-top bends when it is opened, the warning statement must cover the area above the fold line.
(3) The graphic must be positioned directly below the warning statement.
(4) The warning statement, graphic and explanatory message must be displayed using this layout:
9.20 Back outer surface of horizontal cigarette cartons
(1) A warning statement, a graphic and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of a horizontal cigarette carton must cover at least 90% of the total area.
(2) The warning statement, graphic and explanatory message must be displayed using this layout:
9.21 Back outer surface of pouches
(1) A warning statement, a graphic and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of a pouch must cover at least 75% of the total area.
Note Under section 2.2, the part of the surface that is covered by the flap is not part of the back outer surface. That part of the surface is an alternative to the inside flap of the pouch.
(2) The graphic, warning statement and explanatory message must be displayed using this layout:
9.22 Back outer surface of large cylinders
(1) A warning statement, a graphic and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of a large cylinder (other than retail packaging for cigars) must cover at least 75% of the total area.
Note See section 9.24 for retail packaging for cigars.
9.23 Back outer surface of small cylinders
(1) A warning statement and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of a small cylinder (other than retail packaging for cigars) must cover at least 60% of the total area.
(2) The warning statement and explanatory message must be displayed using this layout:
9.24 Back outer surface of retail packaging for cigars (other than cigar tubes) and other general retail packaging
(1) A warning statement and an explanatory message on the back outer surface of:
(a) retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube); or
(b) retail packaging that is not dealt with in another section of this Subdivision;
must cover at least 75% of the total area.
(a) the retail packaging is retail packaging for cigars (other than a cigar tube); and
(b) the area of the back outer surface is at least 250 cm2;
the warning statement and explanatory message must cover at least 188 cm2.
(3) The warning statement and explanatory message must be displayed on vertical retail packaging using this layout:
(4) The warning statement and explanatory message must be displayed on horizontal retail packaging using this layout:
9.25 Back outer surface of retail packaging for retail sale of smokeless tobacco
A warning statement on the back outer surface of retail packaging for smokeless tobacco must cover at least 25% of the surface.
Subdivision 3 Other outer surfaces
9.26 Side outer surface of cigarette packs
(1) An information message on a side outer surface of a cigarette pack must cover the total area of the side outer surface from the base of the pack to a notional line that is:
(a) parallel to the top edge of the side outer surface; and
(b) a continuation of the line of the bottom of the flip-top on the front outer surface.
(2) The information message must be displayed on at least one side outer surface.
9.27 Side outer surface of cigarette cartons
(1) An information message on a side outer surface of a cigarette carton must cover at least 25% of the total area.
9.28 Inside flap of pouches
An information message on the inside of the flap of a pouch must be printed within a rectangle measuring at least 80 mm by 25 mm that is positioned:
(a) in the centre of the inside surface of the flap; or
(b) in the centre of the surface of the pouch that is under the flap, and as close as possible to the top edge of the sealed inner pouch.
9.29 Base of large cylinder
An information message on the base of a large cylinder must cover at least 50% of the total area.
9.30 Side outer surface of other retail packaging
(1) An information message must cover at least 50% of the total area on a side outer surface of retail packaging:
(a) on which an information message must be displayed; and
(b) that is not dealt with in another section of this Subdivision;