More than 200 volunteers assembled at Kits Beach Saturday to lend a hand as part of the annual Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup.
According to Jean Fong, spokesperson for the event, over 150 kilograms of trash was removed from the beach stretching from Kits Pool to Vanier Park.
Among the garbage picked up were over 11,000 cigarette butts.
Cigarette butts and associated paraphernalia (plastic tips, matches, cigarette packaging and lighters) consistently rank as the number one item collected during shoreline cleanups.
While the negative health impacts of cigarettes are widely studied and publicized, the negative environmental impacts associated with cigarette waste are less so.
Cigarette- related trash is a major problem world-wide. An estimated 4.3 trillion butts are discarded annually, many of which end up in streets oceans instead of garbage cans.
Whether butts land in the ocean or the trash can, they are not biodegradable and can take up to 12 years to break down, depending on conditions.
A major ‘butt’ component are cellulose acetate filters, a thermoplastic intended to reduce the amount of toxins (cyanide, mercury, arsenic) inhaled by smokers.
That means every discarded butt (which end up in storm drains that empty into streams, rivers, and eventually oceans) is concentrated with these toxins—toxins that have been shown to leach into water and cause a higher fish mortality rate, prompting calls to label cigarette waste as toxic waste.
Other cigarette waste-related environmental issues include wildlife ingestion and subsequent death along the food chain.
As of Sept. 1, 2010, the Vancouver Park Board announced a new bylaw banning smoking, year-round, at all of the city’s parks and beaches. Violators can expect a minimum fine of $250.
It will be interesting to see how next year’s shoreline cleanup statistics will compare to this year’s now that the smoking ban is in effect.
Last modified: September 14, 2018
It is horrible that this many ‘butts’ are found on beaches around the world every year. But if they don’t want smokers to throw their butts on the street then why not (like in Britain & Spain – was just there on holidays) put ashtrays back on the streets. The garbage cans seem to have helped with less garbage on the streets, but since the new bylaws came in all ashtrays were removed from around buildings. Something to ponder.
Thank you VERY MUCH to those who picked up all those butts! Its disgusting how many are all over the beach. Lets hope that next summer we can put our towels down without having butts all over the sand! 🙂
I want to meet the person who counted them
I see BOATHOUSE staff quickly started filling the Park up with more butts, even before the clean-up finished….YUK