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    Business 3 Mins Read

    The hidden cost of nicotine products

    Business 3 Mins Read
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    Walk down almost any city street, beach, or park, and you’ll see them: cigarette butts scattered along the curb, tucked into sidewalk cracks, or washed up along shorelines—4.5 trillion of them. They’re now so common they’ve become nearly invisible. But that ubiquity masks a growing environmental crisis—one that has only intensified as nicotine products evolve.

    For decades, cigarette butts have been the most littered item in the world. The filter—often mistaken as biodegradable—is made of cellulose acetate, a form of plastic that can persist in the environment for years. These filters don’t just sit there; they break down into microplastics, leaching toxic chemicals like arsenic and lead into soil and waterways. The result is widespread contamination that affects ecosystems far beyond where someone drops a cigarette.

    THE PROBLEM IS MULTIPLYING

    The rise of e-cigarettes and disposable vapes has introduced a new category of waste—one that combines plastic, electronics, and hazardous waste. Most also contain lithium-ion batteries, circuit boards, and residual nicotine liquid. According to the Center for Environmental Health, academic studies have found toxic chemicals like lead, arsenic, nickel, and cadmium in some of the most popular disposable e-cigarette brands. More than five disposable vapes are thrown away every second in the United States; that’s an alarming 150 million devices each year. Recently, they’ve even gotten the attention of squirrels, who experts think are mistaking the fruity smells of vapes for food. Improper disposal can also release harmful substances and pose fire risks in waste systems. Yet there is no clear guidance on how to recycle them or on easy, safe ways to dispose of them.

    Nicotine pouches are also impacting the environment. Packaged in plastic containers and marketed as single-use products, they ultimately contribute to the growing stream of small-format plastic waste. As outlined in recent news stories, the pouches themselves are frequently tossed on the ground or into regular trash, where they can introduce nicotine and other chemicals into the environment.

    For years, the burden of cleanup has fallen on cities, taxpayers, and volunteers. Beach cleanups routinely report cigarette butts as the most collected item. Municipalities are facing costly clean-up efforts.

    Other industries have begun to reckon with the reality of single-use, microplastic and e-waste disposal. From electronics to packaging, companies are being pushed toward extended producer responsibility—systems that require manufacturers to account for the full lifecycle of their products, including disposal and recycling. Nicotine products, however, have not faced the same level of scrutiny despite the sheer volume of waste they produce.

    That needs to change.

    Where do all these discarded filters, pouches, and products go? Innovation in this space must extend to materials, waste reduction, and end-of-life solutions. There are also opportunities for clear labeling on disposal and restrictions on single-use devices.

    If we want cleaner ecosystems and healthier people, it’s time to bring the environmental cost of nicotine products out of the shadows—and into the center of the conversation.

    Kathy Crosby is CEO and president of Truth Initiative and Kizzy Charles-Guzman is CEO of the Center for Environmental Health





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