Daily Mail

England’s ‘toxic timebomb’ of 2.4m discarded cigarette butts

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Editor

ENGLAND is facing a ‘toxic timebomb’ of cigarette butts – with 2.4million littered across high streets.

each one, if left, can take 14 years to break apart, leaching toxic chemicals including arsenic, lead, formaldehy­de and nicotine into the earth and water courses – and leaving behind microplast­ics.

smoking rates have fallen in recent years but dropping cigarette butts is still the most common form of littering – accounting for two-thirds of all pieces of litter, according to data company Litterati.

Allison ogden-newton of Keep Britain tidy, which commission­ed the research, said: ‘every day, millions of cigarette butts

‘Chemicals leaching into the earth’

are poisoning our environmen­t, doing damage that can never be undone.’

The charity has now begun a campaign called Bin the Butt.

Miss Ogden-Newton added: ‘our environmen­t cannot wait a day longer for us to tackle this toxic timebomb and we need to get the message across to smokers that each and every one of them has a role to play by doing the right thing – either binning their butt immediatel­y or taking it with them if there is no bin available.’

Dr Dannielle Green, of Anglia Ruskin University, a leading expert on the environmen­tal impact of cigarette butts, said: ‘We know that cigarette butts can affect the growth, behaviour and reproducti­ve output of organisms in our ecosystems, and action needs to be taken to prevent further damage.’

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