• About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: CoD, govt at odds on smoking rules: Macau official
Ad image
  • About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: CoD, govt at odds on smoking rules: Macau official
Ad image
Search
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
GGRAsia > Latest News > CoD, govt at odds on smoking rules: Macau official
Latest NewsMacauTop of the deck

CoD, govt at odds on smoking rules: Macau official

Newsdesk Published November 6, 2014
Share
3 Min Read

The Macau government and casino operator Melco Crown Entertainment Ltd have different legal views on the interpretation of the latest set of smoking rules, the head of the city’s Health Bureau, Lei Chin Ion (pictured), admitted on Wednesday.

The bureau and Melco Crown are embroiled in a dispute over a smoking area at City of Dreams, the company’s flagship casino resort in Cotai.

The Macau government accuses the company of having transformed a non-smoking area into a smoking area without receiving authorisation from the Health Bureau. Melco Crown said in a press release last week that its operations are compliant with Macau legal requirements and that all its smoking areas have been approved for smoking since 2012 by an executive order from the Macau government Chief Executive.

Since October 6, smoking on casino main floors is only allowed in enclosed airport-style smoking rooms that do not contain any gaming tables or slot machines.

In the run up to the new smoking regime, guidance from government officials was that casino operators would be able to set up smoking areas with gaming tables and slot machines on non-main floor zones “that are of limited access to specific games and gamblers”.

This was understood by casino managements to cover not only VIP rooms but also premium mass gambling areas when they were isolated from the rest of the mass-market floor.

However less than one week before the rule changes were implemented, a press statement from the Health Bureau said smoking would not be allowed in premium mass areas of any kind.

Bureau head Mr Lei on Wednesday confirmed the government had already started “legal procedures” against Melco Crown. He said the gaming operator faced being fined for failing to put up no-smoking signs in the area under dispute at City of Dreams.

Nomura International (Hong Kong) Ltd analysts Louise Cheung and Stella Xing said in a note on Wednesday that “there continues to be uncertainty over the application of the smoking ban as evidenced by the ongoing confusion over the newly converted City of Dreams smoking area.”

They added: “Smoking was permitted when we visited and we had to show a membership card to enter the enclosed area. Other operators are keenly following the outcome to determine if they can pursue the same strategy.”

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

Pagcor chief says Philippine GGR could fall by as much as 19pct this year: reports
June 4, 2026
S.Korea, China to boost mutual air-traffic rights in first easing for seven years: reports
June 4, 2026
Osaka city to start soon RFP for Yumeshima expansion supporting MGM Osaka
June 4, 2026

Most Popular

HeadlinesLatest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 1World

Wynn Resorts’ largest shareholder Tilman Fertitta to acquire U.S. casino operator Caesars Entertainment

May 29, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 1

Sands China hires ex-MGM China exec Hubert Wang as COO

May 29, 2026
HeadlinesJapanLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Potential MGM Resorts buyout could trigger review of Macau, Japan assets: analysts

June 3, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 3

Challenging for Macau to get significant per-capita increase in non-gaming spending: CreditSights

May 29, 2026

Code of Ethics

Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Contact Us

Follow US
Copyright 2026 TEAM Publishing and Consultancy Ltd / All rights reserved
Sign up to our FREE Newsletter

Subscribe now and never miss our latest news!

Zero spam, unsubscribe at any time.