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World No Tobacco Day: How tobacco is poisoning our planet

How does smoking and chewing tobacco affect the Earth? For starters, cigarette butts are one of the most littered items on this planet.

May 31, 2023 / 17:23 IST
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Every year, approximately 600 million trees are cut down and 200,000 hectares cleared for tobacco cultivation.
Every year, approximately 600 million trees are cut down and 200,000 hectares cleared for tobacco cultivation. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Every year, the tobacco industry costs the world more than 8 million human lives, 600 million trees, 200,000 hectares of land, 22 billion tonnes of water and 84 million tonnes of CO2. Add to it cigarette butts that are one of the most littered items on this planet. On World No Tobacco Day, here’s a look at how tobacco is poisoning our planet.

Trees chopped: Every year, approximately 600 million trees are cut down and 200,000 hectares cleared for tobacco cultivation. And an estimated 11.4 million metric tonnes of wood are burned to cure tobacco every year.

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As of 2022, tobacco farming is responsible for 5 percent of all global deforestation. On average each tree produces enough paper for 15 packs of cigarettes. Tobacco manufacturers use four miles of paper every hour to wrap and package cigarettes and other products — making the entire industry a sizeable contributor to deforestation.

The majority of tobacco is grown in low-and-middle-income countries, where water and farmland are often desperately needed to produce food for the region. Instead, they are being used to grow tobacco plants, while more and more land is being cleared of forests.