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This Is What Your Cigarettes Are Destroying (Apart From Your Lungs)

Representational image.

Cigarette butts seem to be everywhere scattered along green spaces, sidewalks, beaches, waterways, and virtually everywhere we go. It may look like cotton, but 98% of cigarette filters are made up of plastic fibres (Cellulose Acetate) that are tightly packed together. So, it comes as no surprise that cigarettes are one of the most littered items on Earth. Worldwide, around 4.5 million cigarettes are littered every year and have a big environmental impact.

The littered cigarette butts leach toxic chemicals such as arsenic, nicotine and lead, to name few, in the environment and contaminate water. The toxic exposure can poison fish as well as animals who happen to eat cigarette butts. Besides being toxic, these cigarette butts are non-biodegradable and can take up to 10 years or more to break down, depending on environmental conditions like rainfall and sun.

Cigarette Litter: Kolkata

A survey report released by ICICI Lombard Tobacco Consumption Habits 2014 states that in Kolkata, a person consumes almost 10 cigarettes a day, making the city the highest consumer of cigarettes in India. The consumption frequency is higher in Kolkata than in any other metro city. For example, a Mumbaikar consumes six to seven cigarettes in a day. As per the report, the consumption pattern has seen a 44% increase in cigarette smoking, which has increased in the last two to three years, with weekly spending on cigarette being ₹350.

Smoking isn’t just harmful to health; it is also damaging the planet. This was the key message of a report commissioned by the World Health Organisation. The study states that tobacco’s annual carbon footprint is 84 million tonnes, which is almost as high as the greenhouse gas emissions of Peru or Israel. Besides being toxic in nature, tobacco’s production requires intensive use of natural resources and uses chemicals that pollute the environment and harm human health.

Cigarette Litter: Effect On The Environment

Approximately six trillion cigarettes are manufactured every year globally, which take up some 4 million hectares of land and require more than 22 billion tonnes of water. The WHO study also calculated the environmental impact of being a smoker at an individual level, with depletion of 1.4 million litres of water as a result of producing enough tobacco to smoke a pack of 20 cigarettes every day for 50 years.

Cigarette pollution in the environment also affects the lives of animals. When cigarette butts and packaging end up littered in the environment, animals are at risk of consuming them. The toxic chemicals then adversely affect the animal’s health. The chemicals act as poison and can kill them. Additionally, this debris cannot be digested by animals, thus resulting in choking and sickness. The debris gets trapped in the animal’s stomach when they consume such litter.

The land is not the only part of the environment that is affected heavily by the smoking industry. Rivers, waterways and oceans are also affected by harmful cigarette pollution. When such litter ends up in water bodies, the toxic chemicals contaminate the water, which is then harmful to those consuming it. A study states that cigarette butts are one of the largest causes of heavy metal contamination in water.

The study further explained that the chemicals from a single cigarette butt release enough toxins to kill 50% of fish exposed to it for 96 hours. Cigarette butts look like insects, and small fish will consume them because they cannot tell the difference. The butts stay in the animal’s stomach, limiting their stomach capacity and changing their eating habits.

Besides being toxic and its impact on land, waterways and aquatic life, cigarette butt litter also destroys the beauty and greenery of the surrounding.

Awareness And Acceptance

During a 2018 coastal clean-up by Ocean Conservancy, cigarette butts ranked number 1 on the list of most littered items. More than 2 million pieces were collected in over 100 countries. Many people are aware that smoking has harmful effects on health, but very few people realize the fact that the small yet ubiquitous cigarette butt is dangerous to the environment. As per a survey done by Waste Wheel, 70% of people are completely unaware that cigarette butt litter is pollution and that it does not degrade easily.

Lack of awareness that the filters are made up of plastic fibres and lack of acceptance that the flick-away culture results in the litter are further increasing the problem, the impact of which is beyond cleanliness. People in Kolkata discard up to two-third of cigarette sticks after smoking. A sanitation worker in Kolkata, says he picks up 1000 cigarette filters each day outside subway entrances, chai shops, etc. the story is same across the city where people unaware, flick-away the cigarette butts on the streets.

Solutions

Every year trillions of cigarettes are manufactured which end up in the streets, waterways, and oceans. The number of cigarette filters being accumulated is huge, the impact of which is beyond cleanliness. However, some solutions can be adopted to minimize such waste.

Lack of awareness also exists outside India, and it’s a global issue. The problem is that people will still smoke and will continue to contribute to the overall 175000 tonnes of butts which will keep adding to the waste problem in the world. But at least the person can mitigate the impact by not exposing others and by being responsible for the discarding.

Though it’s easy, a society free of cigarette butts may still be difficult to achieve, yet not impossible.

Waste Wheel: Changing The Course Of Waste

We provide solid waste management solutions to our clients. We are based in Kolkata. Our clients range from residential complex, schools and offices. We provide custom pickup of waste, segregate and make sure it is being recycled. Our new project is about understanding cigarette litter and how we can make efforts to minimize the litter also make efforts to segregate, collect and recycle these wastes.

We have collaborated with major pubs and cafes across the city where we replace or install our Butt Bin (ashcans) to collect cigarette waste. We believe in upcycling; hence all our bins are upcycled and designed appropriately to serve the purpose. We have managed to collect approximately 65 kg of waste and managed to recycle them with our recycling partner.

We aim to spread awareness and promote individual actions, and we are trying to do it through our range of sustainable products made of bamboo, wood and upcycled paper which are perfect substitutes for plastic.

    

Let’s say no to our throwaway culture and demonstrate a more sustainable way.

If you can’t reuse it, refuse it.

This post was first published on Let Me Breathe here

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