Difference between revisions of "Cigarette Butt Litter"

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[[File:Juvenile red billed gull smoking.jpg|300px|thumb|right|An immature Red billed gull trying out a cigarette butt as food]]
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[[File:Juvenile red billed gull smoking.jpg|300px|An immature Red billed gull trying out a cigarette butt as food]]
[[File:Bird Butt.jpg|300px|thumb|right]]
 
[[File:Butts OCquiz.jpg|300px|thumb|right]]
 
[[File:Butts litter.jpg|300px|thumb|right]]
 
  
 +
<br><br>
 
==What's the Problem?==
 
==What's the Problem?==
  
Cigarette butt litter is a major problem at our beaches, in the ocean and throughout the watersheds which carry water, trash and debris to our beaches. Cigarette butts discarded in parking lots, along sidewalks and in street gutters miles from the coast [http://www.latimes.com/visuals/graphics/la-me-g-snapshot-storm-drains-20150401-htmlstory.html inevitably make their way through storm drains, creeks and rivers to the beach and the ocean]. Direct litter of cigarette butts at the beach adds to the problem. It isn't just a matter of unsightly trash and litter. Toxins from cigarettes collect on the filter and are then washed out into our waterways and the ocean. Birds and sea mammals ingest the butts, thinking that it's food. All of us can do things to eliminate cigarette litter throughout our watersheds.
+
Cigarette butt litter is a major problem at our beaches, in the ocean and throughout the watershed. Cigarette butts discarded in parking lots, along sidewalks and in street gutters miles from the coast [http://www.latimes.com/visuals/graphics/la-me-g-snapshot-storm-drains-20150401-htmlstory.html inevitably make their way through storm drains, creeks and rivers to the beach and the ocean]. Direct litter of cigarette butts at the beach adds to the problem. It isn't just a matter of unsightly trash and litter. Toxins, toxic chemicals, and carcinogens from cigarettes collect on the filter and are then washed out into our waterways and the ocean. Birds and sea mammals ingest these toxic butts, misinterpreting them for food.  
 
<br><br>
 
<br><br>
Here is a short PSA from Surfrider about Cigarette Butt Litter:<br>
+
All of us can do things to eliminate cigarette litter throughout our watersheds. Here is a short PSA from Surfrider San Francisco about Cigarette Butt Litter:<br>
<html>
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<youtube dimensions="560x315" alignment="inline">MNY9tR_twkg</youtube>
<left>
 
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</left>
 
</html>
 
 
<br><br>
 
<br><br>
And here's one from students at Veteran's Memorial High School in Brownsville, Texas:
+
And here's one from Tobacco Free California:
 
<br>
 
<br>
<html>
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<youtube dimensions="560x315" alignment="inline">5nq3O5qSLUc</youtube>
<object style="height: 390px; width: 640px"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/nxAWOqkVn9Q?version=3&feature=player_embedded"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/nxAWOqkVn9Q?version=3&feature=player_embedded" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always" width="640" height="360"></object>
 
</html>
 
 
<br><br>
 
<br><br>
Would cigarette butts become litter if they were this size?
+
 
<br>
 
[[File:Cig Butt Big.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Source:Two Hands Project]]
 
<br><br style="clear: both" />
 
<br>
 
 
==Economic Costs==
 
==Economic Costs==
 +
[[File:Butts litter.jpg|300px|thumb|right]]
 +
 +
*Researchers from [https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/13/4705 San Diego State University and Avalon Economics] estimate handling tobacco waste products from cigarette butts to e-cigarette cartridges could cost taxpayers as much as $90,000,000 a year.
 +
*Tobacco [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3088473/ litter abatement costs] to cities are substantial, even when the costs of toxicity and reduced tourism are excluded.
 +
**In San Francisco, the tobacco abatement cost was ~ $5.6 million in 2009.
 +
*[https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/13/4705/htm#B45-ijerph-17-04705 Abatement tasks] typically include the following, each with associated labor and equipment costs:
 +
**Provision and management of disposal receptacles (general and tobacco product waste-specific);
 +
**Mechanical street sweeping;
 +
**Mechanical and/or manual power washing;
 +
**Manual cleanup;
 +
**Storm drain clean out; and,
 +
**Water treatment processes.
 +
*Butts collect in storm drains, emptying into waterways and/or [https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/13/4705/htm clogging storm drains and sanitary sewer systems].
 +
*Among businesses surveyed in a [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2167/jost713.0 Florida litter survey], 98% said that the presence of litter lowered property values and had a negative impact on business sales
 +
*Other costs can be incurred if a discarded cigarette butt starts a fire that destroys a forest, field, or people's homes.
  
* Some of the costs are associated with the manpower and resources to pick up litter. Who picks up litter? Employees of parks, schools, hotels, restaurants, and local governments have to pick up litter, as well as volunteers who care about the environment.
 
* Cigarettes are often littered within 10 feet of a permanent ashtray. Now that most buildings do not allow smoking inside, the problem of discarded butts on sidewalks, entryways and in courtyards is increasing.
 
* Other costs are incurred when a discarded cigarette butt starts a fire that destroys a forest, a field, or people's homes. Fires caused by cigarette butts claim the lives of about 1,000 people and injure about 3,000 people each year.
 
* The costs of "lost revenue" are incurred when tourists will not spend their vacation dollars to visit a beach or park that is full of litter and trash.
 
 
<br>
 
<br>
 +
 
==Environmental Cost of Cigarettes==
 
==Environmental Cost of Cigarettes==
 +
[[File:Bird Butt.jpg|300px]]
  
 
No butts about it. The environmental costs of tobacco products are more than just smoke. They include the following:
 
No butts about it. The environmental costs of tobacco products are more than just smoke. They include the following:
  
* According to [http://www.no-smoke.org/pdf/Environmental_Impact_of_Tobacco.pdf LegacyForHealth.org], data derived from the Ocean Conservancy demonstrated that approximately 3,216,991 cigarettes or cigarette butts were collected from beaches and inland waterways all over the world in 2009, during that year’s annual International Coastal Cleanup (ICC). However, an astonishing 1,362,741 cigarettes and butts were removed from the waterways of the United States alone. There were other items in relation to smoking that were further collected from U.S. waterways, as well. They include 18,555 cigarette lighters, 74,399 cigar tips, and 36,397 tobacco packages.
+
*Cigarette butts are not biodegradable, and a study found that a cigarette butt was only 38% decomposed after two years.<ref>Weideman, E.A. et al. 2020. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969720318234 Quantifying changes in litter loads in urban stormwater run-off from Cape Town, South Africa, over the last two decades]. Science of The Total Environment, Vol. 724.</ref>
* In a study performed by Elli Slaughter of San Diego State University, a single cigarette butt that had traces of tobacco was introduced to a liter of water. This resulted in high toxicity levels, and the death of 50% of the fish in the water. This is the result of one little cigarette butt.
+
*Yearly, 6 trillion cigarettes are smoked worldwide, and 4.5 trillion cigarettes are littered in the environment.<ref> Araujo & Costa. A critical review of the issue of cigarette butt pollution in coastal environments. 2018. Environmental Research</ref>
<br>
+
*Cigarette butts are consistently at the top of the International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) Top 10 list both globally and in the U.S. In 2019, ICC participants around the world picked up 5,716,331 butts, outpacing bottle caps, food wrappers, plastics bags, and straws.<ref>Ocean Conservancy. 2020. [https://oceanconservancy.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Final-2019-ICC-Report.pdf The Beach and Beyond]. International Coastal Clean Up 2019 Report.</ref>
* Cigarettes contain over 165 chemicals - Some of the [http://www.quit-smoking-stop.com/harmful-chemicals-in-cigarettes.html chemicals smokers inhale]:
+
*Plastic components that make up the filter, like cellulose acetate, eventually can be broken down into smaller pieces, but they accumulate in the environment due to their slow degradation rate<ref>Bonanomi, G. et al. 2015. [https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0117393 Cigarette butt decomposition and associated chemical changes assessed by 13C CPMAS NMR]. PLoS One, Vol 10, No. 1.</ref>
** Benzo[a]pyrene: found in coal tar and cigarette smoke and it is one of the most potent cancer causing chemical in the world.
+
* In a study performed by Elli Slaughter of San Diego State University, when a single cigarette butt that had traces of tobacco was introduced to a liter of water, the exposure resulted in high toxicity levels, and the death of 50% of the fish in the water. This is the result of one little cigarette butt.
** Arsenic: deadly poison that causes diarrhea, cramps, anemia, paralysis and malignant skin tumors. It is used in pesticides.
+
* Cigarettes contain over 165 chemicals - including [http://www.quit-smoking-stop.com/harmful-chemicals-in-cigarettes.html chemicals smokers inhale]:
** Acetone: It's one of the active ingredients in nail polish remover.
+
** Benzo[a]pyrene: found in coal tar and cigarette smoke, is one of the most potent cancer causing chemicals in the world.
** Lead: Lead poisoning stunts growth, causes vomiting, and causes brain damage.
+
** Arsenic: a deadly poison that causes diarrhea, cramps, anemia, paralysis and malignant skin tumors. It is used in pesticides.
 +
** Acetone: one of the active ingredients in nail polish remover.
 +
** Lead: lead poisoning stunts growth, and causes vomiting and brain damage.
 
** Formaldehyde: causes cancer, can damage lungs, skin, and digestive systems. Embalmers use it to preserve dead bodies.
 
** Formaldehyde: causes cancer, can damage lungs, skin, and digestive systems. Embalmers use it to preserve dead bodies.
** Toluene: highly toxic, commonly use as an ingredient in paint thinner.
+
** Toluene: highly toxic chemical, commonly used as an ingredient in paint thinner.
** Butane: highly flammable butane is one of the key components in gasoline.
+
** Butane: a highly flammable key component of gasoline.
** Cadmium: cause damage to the liver, kidneys and brain, and stays in the body for years.
+
** Cadmium: known to cause damage to the liver, kidneys and brain, and stays in the body for years.
** Ammonia: causes individuals to absorb more nicotine, keeping them hooked on smoking.
+
** Ammonia: known to cause individuals to absorb more nicotine, keeping them hooked on smoking.
 
** Benzene: found in pesticides and gasoline.  
 
** Benzene: found in pesticides and gasoline.  
* Plastic pieces have been found in the stomachs of fish, birds, whales, and other marine creatures that mistake them as food, swallowing harmful plastic and toxic chemicals. Ingestion of plastic cigarette filters is a threat to wildlife. Sometimes even young children pick up and ingest cigarette butts.
+
* Plastic cigarette filers have been found in the stomachs of fish, birds, whales, and other marine creatures that mistake them as food, swallowing both the harmful plastic and associated toxic chemicals. Sometimes even young children pick up and ingest cigarette butts.
* Wind and rain often carry cigarette butts into waterways, where the toxic chemicals in the cigarette filters leak out, threatening the quality of the water and the creatures that live in it.
+
* Wind and rain often carry cigarette butts into waterways, where the toxic chemicals in the cigarette filters leach out, threatening the quality of the water and the creatures that live in it.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
 
==Solutions - What You Can Do To Help==
 
==Solutions - What You Can Do To Help==
 +
[[File:Butts OCquiz.jpg|300px|thumb|right]]
  
 
* Educate community members to be responsible with their cigarette litter.
 
* Educate community members to be responsible with their cigarette litter.
 
* Provide smokers with an easily accessible, reusable means to dispose of their cigarette butts responsibly and safely.
 
* Provide smokers with an easily accessible, reusable means to dispose of their cigarette butts responsibly and safely.
* Consider local and regional policies designed to significantly reduce the amount of cigarette litter thrown onto the beach by smokers.
+
* Consider local and regional policies designed to significantly reduce the amount of cigarette litter thrown onto the beach by smokers. The policies in [https://www.citymb.info/home/showdocument?id=41659 Manhattan Beach] and [http://www4.honolulu.gov/docushare/dsweb/Get/Document-135335/BILL072(12),%20CD1.pdf Honolulu] are great starting points for legislators who are considering cigarette ordinances for their communities.  
 
* Set examples for others by not littering.
 
* Set examples for others by not littering.
 
* Volunteer to help organize a cleanup.
 
* Volunteer to help organize a cleanup.
 
* Set a meeting with your local legislature to discuss the problems of litter which comes from cigarettes.
 
* Set a meeting with your local legislature to discuss the problems of litter which comes from cigarettes.
* Buy and display one of our "Hold On To Your Butt" bumper stickers (available at [http://shop.surfrider.org/collections/stickers/products/butt-sticker?variant=11053111617 Surfrider's online store])  
+
* Buy and display one of our "Hold On To Your Butt" bumper stickers (available at [http://shop.surfrider.org/collections/stickers/products/butt-sticker?variant=11053111617 Surfrider's online store]).
 
* Get involved with a Surfrider chapter [[Hold On To Your Butt]] campaign.
 
* Get involved with a Surfrider chapter [[Hold On To Your Butt]] campaign.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
==References==
+
==Additional Information==
 
 
Much of the information in this article came from the website of [http://www.earthresource.org/campaigns/smoke-free/overview.html Earth Resource Foundation].
 
<br><br>
 
Other sources include:
 
 
 
 
* [http://www.cigarettelitter.org/ Cigarette Litter.org]
 
* [http://www.cigarettelitter.org/ Cigarette Litter.org]
 
* [http://www.cigwaste.org/ Cigarette Butt Pollution Project] (See the "Research" and "Butt FAQ" tabs)
 
* [http://www.cigwaste.org/ Cigarette Butt Pollution Project] (See the "Research" and "Butt FAQ" tabs)
Line 85: Line 84:
 
*[https://quitday.org/support/oceans-lakes-rivers-bays/ QuitDay.org]
 
*[https://quitday.org/support/oceans-lakes-rivers-bays/ QuitDay.org]
 
* [http://bos.ocgov.com/legacy5/newsletters/pdf/09_06_25_Cigarette_Litter_Sekich.pdf Surfrider Foundation's Cigarette Litter Campaign]
 
* [http://bos.ocgov.com/legacy5/newsletters/pdf/09_06_25_Cigarette_Litter_Sekich.pdf Surfrider Foundation's Cigarette Litter Campaign]
 +
* Surfrider Hold on to your Butt PSA Archive
 +
**[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Toov5j-0-4g It's your beach, keep it clean]
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
 
 
[[Category:Full Articles]]
 
[[Category:Full Articles]]
 
 
 
 
{{Clean water}}
 
{{Clean water}}
 +
<br><br>
 +
==References==

Latest revision as of 20:21, 6 January 2022

An immature Red billed gull trying out a cigarette butt as food



What's the Problem?

Cigarette butt litter is a major problem at our beaches, in the ocean and throughout the watershed. Cigarette butts discarded in parking lots, along sidewalks and in street gutters miles from the coast inevitably make their way through storm drains, creeks and rivers to the beach and the ocean. Direct litter of cigarette butts at the beach adds to the problem. It isn't just a matter of unsightly trash and litter. Toxins, toxic chemicals, and carcinogens from cigarettes collect on the filter and are then washed out into our waterways and the ocean. Birds and sea mammals ingest these toxic butts, misinterpreting them for food.

All of us can do things to eliminate cigarette litter throughout our watersheds. Here is a short PSA from Surfrider San Francisco about Cigarette Butt Litter:



And here's one from Tobacco Free California:



Economic Costs

Butts litter.jpg
  • Researchers from San Diego State University and Avalon Economics estimate handling tobacco waste products from cigarette butts to e-cigarette cartridges could cost taxpayers as much as $90,000,000 a year.
  • Tobacco litter abatement costs to cities are substantial, even when the costs of toxicity and reduced tourism are excluded.
    • In San Francisco, the tobacco abatement cost was ~ $5.6 million in 2009.
  • Abatement tasks typically include the following, each with associated labor and equipment costs:
    • Provision and management of disposal receptacles (general and tobacco product waste-specific);
    • Mechanical street sweeping;
    • Mechanical and/or manual power washing;
    • Manual cleanup;
    • Storm drain clean out; and,
    • Water treatment processes.
  • Butts collect in storm drains, emptying into waterways and/or clogging storm drains and sanitary sewer systems.
  • Among businesses surveyed in a Florida litter survey, 98% said that the presence of litter lowered property values and had a negative impact on business sales
  • Other costs can be incurred if a discarded cigarette butt starts a fire that destroys a forest, field, or people's homes.


Environmental Cost of Cigarettes

Bird Butt.jpg

No butts about it. The environmental costs of tobacco products are more than just smoke. They include the following:

  • Cigarette butts are not biodegradable, and a study found that a cigarette butt was only 38% decomposed after two years.[1]
  • Yearly, 6 trillion cigarettes are smoked worldwide, and 4.5 trillion cigarettes are littered in the environment.[2]
  • Cigarette butts are consistently at the top of the International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) Top 10 list both globally and in the U.S. In 2019, ICC participants around the world picked up 5,716,331 butts, outpacing bottle caps, food wrappers, plastics bags, and straws.[3]
  • Plastic components that make up the filter, like cellulose acetate, eventually can be broken down into smaller pieces, but they accumulate in the environment due to their slow degradation rate[4]
  • In a study performed by Elli Slaughter of San Diego State University, when a single cigarette butt that had traces of tobacco was introduced to a liter of water, the exposure resulted in high toxicity levels, and the death of 50% of the fish in the water. This is the result of one little cigarette butt.
  • Cigarettes contain over 165 chemicals - including chemicals smokers inhale:
    • Benzo[a]pyrene: found in coal tar and cigarette smoke, is one of the most potent cancer causing chemicals in the world.
    • Arsenic: a deadly poison that causes diarrhea, cramps, anemia, paralysis and malignant skin tumors. It is used in pesticides.
    • Acetone: one of the active ingredients in nail polish remover.
    • Lead: lead poisoning stunts growth, and causes vomiting and brain damage.
    • Formaldehyde: causes cancer, can damage lungs, skin, and digestive systems. Embalmers use it to preserve dead bodies.
    • Toluene: highly toxic chemical, commonly used as an ingredient in paint thinner.
    • Butane: a highly flammable key component of gasoline.
    • Cadmium: known to cause damage to the liver, kidneys and brain, and stays in the body for years.
    • Ammonia: known to cause individuals to absorb more nicotine, keeping them hooked on smoking.
    • Benzene: found in pesticides and gasoline.
  • Plastic cigarette filers have been found in the stomachs of fish, birds, whales, and other marine creatures that mistake them as food, swallowing both the harmful plastic and associated toxic chemicals. Sometimes even young children pick up and ingest cigarette butts.
  • Wind and rain often carry cigarette butts into waterways, where the toxic chemicals in the cigarette filters leach out, threatening the quality of the water and the creatures that live in it.


Solutions - What You Can Do To Help

Butts OCquiz.jpg
  • Educate community members to be responsible with their cigarette litter.
  • Provide smokers with an easily accessible, reusable means to dispose of their cigarette butts responsibly and safely.
  • Consider local and regional policies designed to significantly reduce the amount of cigarette litter thrown onto the beach by smokers. The policies in Manhattan Beach and Honolulu are great starting points for legislators who are considering cigarette ordinances for their communities.
  • Set examples for others by not littering.
  • Volunteer to help organize a cleanup.
  • Set a meeting with your local legislature to discuss the problems of litter which comes from cigarettes.
  • Buy and display one of our "Hold On To Your Butt" bumper stickers (available at Surfrider's online store).
  • Get involved with a Surfrider chapter Hold On To Your Butt campaign.


Additional Information



This article is part of a series on Clean Water which looks at various threats to the water quality of our oceans, and the negative impacts polluted waters can have on the environment and human health.

For information about laws, policies, programs and conditions impacting water quality in a specific state, please visit Surfrider's State of the Beach report to find the State Report for that state, and click on the "Water Quality" indicator link.



References

  1. Weideman, E.A. et al. 2020. Quantifying changes in litter loads in urban stormwater run-off from Cape Town, South Africa, over the last two decades. Science of The Total Environment, Vol. 724.
  2. Araujo & Costa. A critical review of the issue of cigarette butt pollution in coastal environments. 2018. Environmental Research
  3. Ocean Conservancy. 2020. The Beach and Beyond. International Coastal Clean Up 2019 Report.
  4. Bonanomi, G. et al. 2015. Cigarette butt decomposition and associated chemical changes assessed by 13C CPMAS NMR. PLoS One, Vol 10, No. 1.