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 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  Green cigarette butts?
Green cigarette butts?
By Green Living Tips | Published  04/11/2010
Fully biodegradable cigarette filters containing plant seeds - a great green innovation or greenwashing?

I admit to being a heavily addicted smoker. I've often joked that I may need to take up heroin dealing to pay for my tobacco habit (tobacco taxes are incredibly high in Australia); but it's really not a laughing matter. Given the nature of this site, my hypocrisy in this aspect is not lost upon me and I have little doubt my addiction will likely bring me a premature and painful death. Even more than the health and financial aspects, the environmental impact of tobacco smoking cause me great angst.

One of the more recent discoveries I made about my filthy habit was in regard to cigarette butts. I always thought cigarette filters were made from plant material such as cotton. They do have their roots in cellulose, but are actually a form of plastic - polymer acetate - and can take anywhere from 1 - 15 years to break down depending on environmental conditions and whose studies you read.

The composition of cigarette filter aside, cigarette smoke contains all sorts of nasty chemicals produced by the burning of the tobacco and the many, many substances added by tobacco companies. There may also be pesticide residue in the tobacco.

Some of these chemicals are present in high concentrations in a discarded butt. The chemicals can leach from cigarette butts when exposed to water and can be toxic to small crustaceans and bacteria.

According to CigaretteLitter.org, an estimated 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are improperly discarded worldwide every year; so it's a massive problem.

A company called Green Butts has developed a 100% biodegradable cigarette filter with a twist. When placed under a thin layer of soil the cigarette filter will sprout plants. Made from a hemp and cotton blend, the company says their green cigarette filters can be combined with a wide variety of seed including grass, flower, fruit, herb, or even trees. Wheat flour and water bind the filter elements as they are spun together.

I like the idea of the butt, but the seed issue bothers me. Smoking shouldn't be made to look cool or come across as being green. A used cigarette butt is toxic waste; to represent it differently is a little unsettling in my opinion. However, perhaps the growing plant would help "detoxify" the butt? I really don't know.

Maybe it's somewhat of a step in the right direction? Perhaps the company might consider a similar product without the seeds. The company does point out that their "green" butts shouldn't be seen as a justification for littering.

Tobacco smoking can never be "environmentally friendly"; it's something I don't try to fool myself into thinking and the butts are just one aspect. Commercial tobacco has a huge environmental impact; from cultivation to consumption. At best, a degree of harm reduction can be achieved - such as by smoking organically grown tobacco. While organic tobacco doesn't make smoking cool, healthy or "green", at least its additive free and grown without pesticides.

As far as I know, you cannot buy "organic" tobacco in Australia; it's just not available like it is in the USA.

I looked at growing my own, even some of our own native tobacco species, partly to reduce my smoking environmental impact. It turns out that In South Australia and I think in most Australian states, you cannot grow any Nicotiana species for the purposes of smoking it as it would be seen as avoiding the tobacco excise tax (currently around AUD$309 a kilogram). If caught, you could be heavily fined . To stay on the right side of the law, you would have to register as a tobacco grower which is a complicated and expensive undertaking.

I believe there's a local market here for organically grown tobacco and for Australian smokers that won't give up for whatever reasons; a company could do well catering to those of us who would like to lighten our tobacco related environmental footprint a little.

Related:

Tobacco's environmental impact



Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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  • Comment #1 (Posted by Netti)

    Why do people who smoke want an organic option??? Have you actually thought about what chemicals go into cigarettes? Yes, if you are smoking just tobacco cigarettes this may be a different case. But then what is the point? I am a non smoker and I just don't see the point.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by peggy)

    i choose to smoke, but i NEVER drop my butt! in fact, i go around picking up the butts of other smokers as atonement for my years of unconscious sinning.smoking is a matter of personal choice, but we must be educated to deal with our toxic waste properly. to me, believing that my butts will be beneficial by growing seeds is the worst kind of green-washing. and i'm surprised and sad that organic tobacco is not available to you in australia
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by MeCSpencer)

    I agree with you that at first glance it seems a good idea to make the butts biodegradable, but the addition of seeds poses potential problems. I have a neighbor who routinely tosses his butts over the fence (another issue completely), and though annoyed, I just rake them up and toss them out. It would be a whole new story if he were planting things in my yard every time he carelessly tossed a butt! It bothers me that this new product might make smoking seem trendy or green, but that pales in comparison to my ire regarding carelessly tossed seeds. Thank you for sharing and for your transparency regarding your own smoking.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Jessica B)

    Biodegradable.. OH YES, Excellent idea!! Seeds, uumm how great are the seeds if they are infused with all the chemicals from smoking the cigarette. We would have 'chemically based' plants popping up everywhere and spreading.
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Jason Taylor)

    Hi I am working with Green-Butts at present in developing this idea further and introducing it to Australia, where I live.

    All are valid and good points about the seeds. Green-Butts are still patent pending and have not gone into production. It is early days. Green-Butts are putting our product out there and reading all the message boards and forums for ideas and critique.

    Seed embedding would be optional, and different strains for different areas and environments. Some seeds could develop problems in some areas where some will not.

    The product is not another green-washing product or idea, the simple fact is, smoking has been around for 1000's of years, and its not going anywhere.
    The big tobacco companies have control and monopoly over governments, organisations and individuals in power, so banning smoking is not going to happen any time soon in developed nations where cigarettes are sold. Its the sad truth, and we do not condone smoking ourselves.

    So why not tackle the issue of cleaning up the environment from the current non-biodegradable cigarette butts? The Pro's far outway the Cons.
    Current anti smoking ads, butt bin placement strategies and any other efforts have had little to no impact with butt litter still on the rise.

    It is a good step in moving forward, and creating a better environment for ourselves. Smoking is the problem, but until smoking is banned then the problem is the actual butts.

    Green-Butts have a solution.

     
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