ENERGY > FOOTPRINTS

Stamp out Cigarette Butt Litter

Smoking pollutes more than the air

These days, most people are aware of the dangers that smoking presents to an individual’s health. The packs themselves carry warnings and anti-smoking campaigns are all over television, public transportation and billboards.

Cigarettes have received a great amount of negative attention over the years, mainly due to tobacco products causing over 400,000 deaths in this country each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Yet people choose to continue smoking. We at BecauseAction are not here to judge or condemn smokers, but we are here to advocate for another decision smokers make.

With every cigarette they finish, the smoker makes a choice. Do they put it out and throw it in the nearest garbage can, or do they toss it on the ground?

Before we go any further, we're going to give our readers a quick pop quiz.

True or False: Cigarettes are biodegradable.

If you guessed False, you’re right!

Cigarette butts, which are made of cellulose acetate, paper and the end of the cigarette’s tobacco are not, in fact, biodegradable. Cellulose acetate is a thermoplastic polymer. This basically means that it is a synthetic fiber, based on cellulose (plant-based) pulp that is processed into a plastic.

Now it's time for a quick bio-chem lesson.

All plastics begin with an organic material base, which could be petroleum, natural gas, wood pulp, or even fibers from plants like corn. These organic molecules are treated with a catalyst to aid a chemical reaction that forms a polymer chain (a chain of many molecules bound together). In this case, the catalyst is called acetic anhydride, and the resulting product is acetate flake. The flake is formed into tiny fibers, called cellulose acetate tow, and then manufactured into recognizable products, such as cigarette filters.

The resulting thermoplastic cellulose acetate is like any other plastic. A synthetic plastic has an incredibly slow rate of degration: it may take anywhere from 18 months to 15 years. In short, your cigarettes take years to degrade just like all plastic products, even when disposed of properly.

To compound this problem, most cigarette butts aren’t, in fact, disposed of properly. By number, cigarette butts are the most littered item in the country, according to the 2008 Annual International Coastal Cleanup.

As litter, the cigarette butts end up in our waterways, oceans, and rivers, where they leach toxic chemicals. Butts have been found in the stomachs of fish, birds, whales and other marine life. It has also been shown that cigarettes are highly toxic to a type of marine flea. A seemingly small form of life, the fleas are an important lower rung in the aquatic food chain.

Cigarette butts contain numerous different poisonous substances and toxins, including the pesticide nicotine, which have a very detrimental effect on ecosystems and wildlife.

Big tobacco is also aware of the problem this presents. Biodegradable filters have been called the ‘holy grail’ by manufacturers, but they also note the obstacles in consumer taste and draw. Tobacco companies are even working to reduce the environmental impact of cigarette trash.

Philip Morris finances the nonprofit organization Keep America Beautiful, which is a community action and education group. One of their largest programs is their cigarette litter prevention program that encourages people to rally around the issue to force change in their own communities. The campaign also focuses on addressing the problem with more accessible receptacles and more stringent littering laws. Simple acts like this were shown to reduce cigarette littering by an average 46 percent.

Even for those who may not be concerned about environmental factors, cigarette litter affects the wallet as well. Residents and business owners, smokers or non, are all paying for cigarette clean-up with sidewalk and street sweeping, park maintenance and cleaning of storm drains and filters. It doesn’t carry a small price tag either. According to Mayor Gavin Newsom, the city of San Francisco alone spends around $11 million annually to clean up cigarette litter.

Beyond all that, cigarette litter contributes to unsightly public areas and destroys naturally beautiful landscapes. Recognition and action to address the problem is necessary. So smokers, think before you throw.

Source: BecauseAction.com

COMMENT ON ARTICLE
by jUDY
AND THEN QUITE SMOKING 4 YEARS AGO MEMORIAL DAY
by Judy
Approximately two years ago here in Denver, Co, a man was driving north on I25 Hwy and saw another man throw a cig butt out his window. It infuriated this man so much that he followed the cig butt thrower until he stopped. The follower parked behind him so he couldn't go any other where and took a baseball bat out and started pounding the cig thrower with the bat until the police came. I was a smoker for 40+ years in the country, in the city, everywhere I went I smoked but NEVER and I mean never discarded a cig butt into anything but the trash. PLEASE be careful if you think you are going to tell someone where to put something because the offender can turn on you. I have a question: does anyone know where the dog poop filled bags goes that are deposited into the little stands provided for that reason and is it the city or county that provides them. Highly possible we could ask them if the cig butts could be disposed of in there too.
by Claudettte
My biggest complaint about smoking has always been the cigarette butts. This thougth came into my mind years ago but it is to long for a T-shirt or bumper sticker. A cat doesn't know the difference between a litter box and the beach but whats your excuse for not knowing the difference between and ashtray and the beach. I was often teased for carrying two bags when walked the beach (one for shells and one for trash). It feels good knowing that picking up the cigarette butts wasn't a waste o time afterall. Can't wai to share this with my smoking friends.
by Taryn
i had no idea about this topic!! thank you so much for writing something so informative!! i cannot wait to tell all of my smoker friends what they are doing to the enviornment.
by june
I do not smoke of course, but I hate people dumping a lot of cigarrette litter into trash cans or anywhere they like. This is a huge pollution to the natural enviornment. It can be pretty dangerous if birds, animals or little kids take these into their mouths. I do not want see this happen often. Also I think it will be helpful to raise the awareness of the whole community. Everybody should be educated about how to maintain the ecosystem and realize the importance of keeping the globe less contaminated.
by Claudette
I had no idea the cost involved in cleaning up cigarette butts. I am not a smoker but my fiancee is. I don't let him smoke in the car but I make him find a trash can for his cigarette butts or it goes back into the pack. I have never understood why a smoker refuses to use his ashtray in the car. I guess they don't realize their car smells anyhow.
by linda
What ARE the environmentally appropriate disposal mechanisms? If the filters et al aren't breaking down "in the urban wilds", they aren't going to biodegrade in landfills either. Incineration likely produces noxious fumes (burning plastic) Is anyone (cigarette mfrs) looking into ways of recycling/reuse?
by Beatrice
Thank you so much for this great article. I am definetly sending this to all my friends and will talk about again because it is a big concern to me. A lot of money is being wasted cleaning up our cities and yet people who get sick from inhaling cigarette smoke cannot treat themselves because they have no insurance. lets use our money wisely! and lets take some action.
by Ed
I also make no judgement about somking; however, I do ride a motorcycle. When a but is thrown out of a moving car window, it has a chance of ending up in my lap. In fact, I almost crashed, throwing out my back, tring to avoid one of the dangerous missles coming from the car in front of, and to the right of me as we were heading down a high speed road in my area.
by CHESTERFILD MARLBORO III
THERE IS NO EVIDENCE SECOND HAND SMOKE IS HARMFUL.. HOWEVER... CIGARETTE BUTTS SHOULD BE PUT IN A CONTAINER...NOT ON THE GROUND...
by Griffin Bear
Great article I sent it to my smoking friends. I appreciate these articles more than you know. In Peace & Hope
by Delia E. Frederick, RN, MSN-ed
cigarette smoking contributes to the preventable cause of death through out the world. The first signs of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic cough and sputum production. These signs occur very early on in an individual's habit. If cigarette smoking only effected those who chose to afflict themselves with a disease that will cause their death maybe that would be OK, but individuals who are chronically exposed to their smoke also at placed at risk. Children who live in homes where smoking occurs develop asthma. The lung take 12 to 20 years to completely develop, so smoking around children arrest proper growth for their lifetime. Spouse of cigarette smokers also are subject to developing COPD. Smokers need to consider all the products released into the air and the final waste, their butt, before they light up in any environment. It is not solely theirs to polute.
by Paul
It would be nice if American cities and towns had more well-designed and maintained public ashtrays / cigarette- disposal bins like Toronto, for example. It would also be nice if the average non-smoker did not carelessly use public ashtrays as regular trash containers. As a smoker, more than once have I been unable to snuff out a cigarette in a public ashtray because it was filled with empty drink cups, food wrappers (flammable paper), etc. thrown there by passers-by too lazy to find a regular trash barrel.

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