| Cigarette filters are the largest source of trash floating in the ocean and are usually not bio-degradable [1, 2]. They end up as micro plastics.
Banning them instead of plastic straws can be seen as vastly more effetive [3]. Edit: It seems pretty useless as they essentially have no function (edit: to health), since the near-universal adoption of filters on cigarettes has not reduced harms to smokers and lung cancer rates have not declined [4]. And the color change is something that was added to make the filter to appear to be effective [5]: > The tobacco industry determined that the illusion of filtration was more important than filtration itself. It added chemicals in the filter so that its colour becomes darker when exposed to smoke (it was invented in 1953 by Claude Teague working for R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company). The industry wanted filters to be seen as effective, for marketing reasons, despite not making cigarettes any less unhealthy. So trying to be rational here, they don't have any health benefits and are responsible for a large share of the microplastics in our ocean. [1]: https://www.businessinsider.de/international/new-study-shows... [2]: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/08/cigar... [3]: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/plastic-straw-ban-cigar... [4]: https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/20/Suppl_1/i10 [5]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cigarette_filter#Colour_change |
#5 Most cigarettes butts are not brown at least in my megacity. White is more popular.
Cigarette butts can take upto 10 years to breakdown at the most.
https://uhs.berkeley.edu/tobaccofacts
Single use plastics take 1,000 years.
One will breakdown in your pets lifetime the other will take a millennia.
We need to ban single plastic use. And perhaps dig a little deeper before making assuming associations (if cigarettes are bad the filters must be destorying the earth / meanwhile the coffee lids you get every morning is really the problem)