A blog set out to explore, archive & relate plastic pollution happening world-wide, while learning about on-going efforts and solutions to help break free of our addiction to single-use plastics & sharing this awareness with a community of clean water lovers everywhere!

Friday, May 8, 2015

Watch: Cigarette Butts, World's #1 Litter, Recycled as Park Benches

A growing movement targets cigarette waste as a solvable problem.



Learn how cigarette butts are collected and recycled into useful products.


Cigarette butts are, by some counts, the world’s number one litter problem.
Butts represent the most numerous form of trash that volunteers collect from the world's beaches on the Ocean Conservancy’s cleanup days. More than two million cigarette parts were recently collected in a single year around the world—double the amount of both food containers and beverage containers.

The hard numbers from some other sources are staggering.
New York state, for instance, produces an estimated 1.5 million tons of cigarette butts a year. And butts account for about 13 percent of the litter accumulated on Texas highways, 130 million butts a year.
The problem extends well beyond the gross factor. Cigarette filters are made from wood-based plastic fibers that take generations to fully decompose, says Tom Szaky, CEO and founder of the New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle.
And the filters can leach nicotine and tar into the ground or water.
Butts are also often eaten by birds, fish, and other animals, who can choke on them or be hurt from the poisons they contain.
Most commonly found pieces of trash in the oceans
Volunteers collected and tallied ocean litter on one day during Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup in selected spots around the world.
Cigarettes/cigarette filters
2,117,931
Food wrappers/containers
1,140,222
Beverage bottles (plastic)
1,065,171
Plastic bags
1,019,902
Caps, lids
958,893
Cups, plates, forks, knives, spoons
692,767
Straws, stirrers
611,048
Beverage bottles (glass)
521,730
Beverage cans
339,875
Paper bags
298,332
 

As seen in the video above, TerraCycle is one of a handful of companies that is working to collect and recycle spent butts, by turning them into plastic lumber that can be used for benches, pallets, and other uses.
Another company, EcoTech Displays, is working on a system to recycle butts into insulation, clothing, and even jewelry.
Governments have also increasingly taken note of the problem, by beginning to enforce littering laws against those who toss their butts or imposing extra taxes on cigarettes to help defray the cost of cleanup, from Maine to San Francisco.
Follow Brian Clark Howard on Twitter and Google+.
 

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