Campaign #FillTheBottle aims to tidy up cigarette butts By Toby Luckhurst

BBC News Published duration 8 August 2019

image copyright Amel Talha image caption Amel Talha, bottom right, first used the hashtag #FillTheBottle to launch the campaign

Cigarette butts - flicked into drains, mashed under foot or dropped in parks - are a common sight around the world.

But a campaign launched by a group of French teenagers to tidy them up has highlighted their environmental impact.

Amel Talha launched the hashtag #FillTheBottle after a friend collected cigarette butts in a water bottle and posted a photo on Twitter.

The campaign has inspired thousands to clean up what is thought to be the most common form of litter around the globe

"This is a big problem in France but also all around the world," the 18-year-old tells the BBC, adding she is "extremely happy and proud" that the campaign has had such an effect.

"20 minutes to fill this 1 litre bottle in an area of less than 50m," he wrote. "This is extremely serious."

Another friend, Christian Musitu Swamu, retweeted the image. "It isn't much, but if everybody did it, that would be something cool," he wrote, prompting Amel to tweet: "#FillTheBottle would be cool I think".

Within 24 hours, thousands of photos, videos and tweets appeared using the hashtag. "I lost my words... to see that people liked it and took time to do it," Amel says.

Amel says she is in contact with the French company MéGo to dispose of the butts. MéGo collects and recycles filters , processing them at their factories to turn them into plastic products - including ashtrays.

What's in a cigarette butt?

Filters - which make up the ends or butts of the cigarette - are made of cellulose acetate, a synthetic product that is commercially derived from wood pulp. It has also been used to make magnetic tape, frames for glasses, and even the original Lego toy bricks.

"People think cigarettes are biodegradable," Nicola Boon at charity Keep Britain Tidy tells the BBC. "They know they're toxic, but they think the toxins disappear magically."

In fact, the charity says that, depending on conditions, it can take anywhere from 18 months to 10 years for the butts to entirely break down. This means cigarettes dropped on the street, stubbed out on the beach or put down drains can cause pollution for years.

image copyright AFP/Getty image caption Cigarette butts are thought to be the world's most common form of litter

Keep Britain Tidy says plastics, arsenic, lead and nicotine from the filters can all leak into the environment and cause harm to marine life. Just one cigarette butt per litre of water can be highly toxic to fish, their research suggests.

A statement sent to the BBC by British American Tobacco - the world's largest publicly traded tobacco company - says the filters "can degrade over a period of between a few months to three-year time period, depending on the environmental conditions".

"Whilst there is currently no feasible alternative to Cellulose Acetate for filters, we continue to seek to reduce the impact of our products on the environment by investing and innovating to test and develop alternative materials, both internally and with third party suppliers."

What are others doing to clean up filters?

The French campaign is not the only attempt to draw attention to cigarette pollution.

In Germany, Berlin resident Stephan von Orlow has launched a petition in June calling for a deposit on cigarettes. So far, it has attracted more than 52,000 signatures

Smokers would pay 20 cents per cigarette, or an extra four euros (£3.68; $4.47) per pack. Pocket ash trays would be issued, so people could safely collect and return the butts to the shop and would get their deposit back.

media caption 'Why I'm picking up a million cigarette butts'

Mr von Orlow tells the BBC he and his local campaign group Aufheber have been picking up cigarette butts for years.

"But we found out its very, very hard to collect all these cigarettes you find," the 49-year-old Berliner says. "We decided to search for a process that would make sure no butts end up in nature any more."

German cigarette industry heads have already invited the campaigners for a discussion in September. "There's a lot of interest in this," Mr von Orlow says.