4.6 Article

A Review of Environmental Pollution from the Use and Disposal of Cigarettes and Electronic Cigarettes: Contaminants, Sources, and Impacts

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su132312994

Keywords

cigarette butts; cotinine; environmental contamination; microplastics; nicotine; tobacco product waste

Funding

  1. California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Grants Program Office of the University of California [29NP-0001]
  2. University of California Natural Reserve System (UC NRS), Office of the President

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The impact of cigarette and e-cigarette contamination on the environment is significant, affecting various biota from bacteria to mammals. Chemical substances released from cigarette butts and e-cigarette components can be toxic to a wide range of organisms, highlighting the potential for large-scale environmental impacts of tobacco product waste. However, there are still critical gaps in understanding the full extent of these impacts on environmental health and ecosystem functioning.
While the impacts of cigarette smoking on human health are widely known, a less recognized impact of tobacco product use and disposal is environmental pollution. This review discusses the current literature related to cigarette and e-cigarette contamination in the context of environmental sources and impacts, with a focus on the documented influences on biota, ranging from bacteria to mammals. Cigarette butts and electronic cigarette components can leach contaminants into soil, water, and air. Cellulose acetate cigarette filters comprising the butts are minimally degradable and are a source of bulk plastic and microplastic pollution, especially in aquatic ecosystems where they tend to accumulate. Cigarette combustion and aerosol production during e-cigarette use result in air contamination from sidestream, exhaled, and thirdhand pathways. The chemical byproducts of tobacco product use contaminate wastewater effluents, landfill leachates, and urban storm drains. The widespread detection of nicotine and cotinine in the environment illustrates the potential for large-scale environmental impacts of tobacco product waste. Studies show that cigarette butt leachate and nicotine are toxic to microbes, plants, benthic organisms, bivalves, zooplankton, fish, and mammals; however, there remain critical knowledge gaps related to the environmental impacts of tobacco product waste on environmental health and ecosystem functioning.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available