The Philippine Star

Poisoning the planet

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Earlier this month, scientists sounded the alarm on the presence of microplast­ics in the polluted air of the National Capital Region. The warning was based on tests conducted on air samples from 17 local government units in the NCR from Dec. 16 to 31, 2021, at the height of the COVID pandemic.

Today, World No Tobacco Day, health experts are pointing out that the second highest form of plastic pollution worldwide comes from cigarette filters, which contain microplast­ics. Last year the World Health Organizati­on reported that approximat­ely 4.5 trillion cigarette filters pollute oceans, rivers, urban areas, beaches and soil annually. Tobacco products including vapes and e-cigarettes, which contain 7,000 types of toxic chemicals that leech into the environmen­t when discarded, are the most littered item on the planet, according to the WHO.

In a report titled “Tobacco: Poisoning Our Planet,” the WHO said the carbon footprint of the tobacco industry – an estimated 84 million tons of carbon dioxide annually – is equivalent to one-fifth of the carbon footprint of commercial aviation and therefore worsens global warming. The WHO wants cigarette filters to be classified as single-use plastic to be covered by appropriat­e regulation.

The warning on tobacco’s carbon footprint is apart from the WHO’s long-standing warning about smoking-related deaths, placed at eight million annually. Much progress has been made in the campaign to ban smoking in enclosed public places.

These days the WHO is also moving to raise public awareness on the risks posed by EVALI – E-cigarette or VapingAsso­ciated Lung Injury. Vapes also contain nicotine and certain brands are laced with the active ingredient in marijuana. Health experts in the United States have warned about serious lung injuries from EVALI.

For this year’s World No Tobacco Day, the WHO is urging government­s to provide incentives for crop switching from tobacco to sustainabl­e food commoditie­s amid a worsening global food crisis. “Grow food, not tobacco” is the theme this year. Despite warnings about green tobacco sickness – a type of nicotine poisoning that afflicts tobacco farmers – resistance to this campaign is expected in the Philippine­s, which is the world’s 15th largest producer of tobacco and the second biggest in the Western Pacific after China.

But even if the Philippine­s is currently led by a native of the country’s tobacco-producing region, the admonition from the WHO can be explored for appropriat­e even if gradual action, in the interest of public health, food security and environmen­tal protection. There are so many other cash crops, and they don’t cause such harm to the health of humans and the planet like tobacco.

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