Toxic Cigarette Butts

Tobacco Filters Release Poisons Long After Use

© Rupert Taylor

Jun 2, 2009
Cigarette Litter in Cambridge, Massachusetts., cigarettelitter.org
Few people argue that cigarette smoking is a harmless activity, however the thrown away butts are now creating a growing problem.

The Lung Association says that “Tobacco smoke also contains over 4,000 chemicals, many of which are known causes of cancer. Just a few of these chemicals are:

  • “Carbon Monoxide (found in car exhaust)
  • “Arsenic (rat poison);
  • “Ammonia (found in window cleaner);
  • “Acetone (found in nail polish remover);
  • “Hydrogen Cyanide (gas chamber poison);
  • “Naphthalene (found in mothballs); and,
  • “Sulphur Compounds (found in matches).”

The list goes on to include lead, formaldehyde, and butane.

Cigarette Poisons Kill Millions of People

In the 1990 documentary “The Medical Aspects of Tobacco,” Dr. Max Schneider points out that: “Cigarettes are the only substance sold, that when the user follows the instructions carefully, will result in the consumer becoming toxic, chronically ill, and dead.”

During the 20th century, cigarette smoking killed more than 100 million people worldwide and the World Health Organization (WHO) says the death toll will be 10 million a year by 2025. The WHO adds that between 80,000 and 100,000 kids are taking up the habit every day.

Cigarette Butt Litter Continues to Pollute

According to The Chicago Tribune (June 18, 2008), 4.5 trillion cigarette butts end up as trash every year worldwide. The newspaper’s article, “How the Butts Stack up,” lists many other interesting facts about the cigarette filters that are made from cellulose acetate:

  • It takes between 10 and 15 years for a fibre cigarette filter to break down;
  • 200 cigarette filters, taken as a whole, contain enough nicotine to kill an adult; and,
  • Cigarette butts represent 30 percent of the waste found on American shorelines and waterways.

What happens after a cigarette butt is flicked onto the street, nature trail, or beach? CigaretteLitter.org has the answer: “Typically wind and rain carry the cigarette into the water supply, where the toxic chemicals the cigarette filter was designed to trap leak out into aquatic ecosystems, threatening the quality of the water and many aquatic lifeforms. Cigarette butts may seem small, but with several trillion butts littered every year, the toxic chemicals add up!”

Governments Fighting Cigarette Butt Pollution

The New York Times (May 28, 2009) reports that, “dozens of municipalities across the nation have had enough. Weary of the butts’ unsightliness and the costs of sweeping them up, cities have passed bans on smoking on beaches and playgrounds.”

The same article, “Cigarette Butts: Tiny Trash that Piles up,” by Leslie Kaufman says that, “In San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom said last week that he would go a step further, seeking a 33-cents-a-pack tax to cover the $11 million that the city spends annually to remove cigarette litter.”

The newspaper goes on to point out that such toxins as nicotine, benzene, and cadmium leach out of discarded filters long after they have been thrown away.

Meanwhile, the people at ButtsOut.net are offering a partial solution – the personal, portable ash tray. It’s a small box that can be clipped onto “belt, bag, ski suit, or clothing.” Drop in the finished smoke, close the lid, and the butt is taken out of the waste stream for safe disposal.


The copyright of the article Toxic Cigarette Butts in Toxicology is owned by Rupert Taylor. Permission to republish Toxic Cigarette Butts in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Cigarette Litter in Cambridge, Massachusetts., cigarettelitter.org
       


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