The 'non-biodegradable butts' in the glass tubes in the still picture with the Start arrow for the video have been packed into the tube dry before carefully adding distilled water. I can verify this fact by the clarity of the water in the tubes and the fact that every cigarette butt that I have ever dropped into the toilet falls apart within minutes.
arne, what makes you think the tubes are filled with water?
next, it seems clear that when the article says "cigarette butts are not biodegradable", it's specifically referring to filters. i trust that we've all seen filters that have been tossed into the environment and are still intact weeks, months, or even years afterwards.
and yes, i don't see how anybody in their right mind could argue that shredded cured chemically-treated tobacco enclosed by a thin layer of paper wouldn't easily break up in water, but whether or not it does hardly matters as far as i can see. either way, a deadly mix of chemicals and radioactive material is going to leech into the available environment.
and yes, we already know know about the radioactivity and the chemical additives from studies conducted since probably the 50's, so i doubt anybody in their right mind would argue against that, either.
Another intriguing question is the use of this display at all. It's certainly damn ugly to look at, but I don't smoke like that myself ...
er, sorry... you don't smoke like
what exactly?
...skipping a bunch that i don't see as relevant...
As for the nicotine in the butts killing fish, that's a lie too.
i looked again at the original article, and i don't see where it specifically says that
nicotine in the butts is killing fish. i do see that nicotine is mentioned in the secondary article, probably because it's the single most identifiable component of tobacco, but nicotine is just one out of hundreds of culprits.
i do see where it says that
toxic waste in the butts harms the environment, however, and that seems to be the real point.
...skipping some more interesting statements that i don't see as relevant...
When I was working at Image Transform, I was sent over to Warners to pick up old film stock from "Jack Warner's Bomb Shelter" at the studio and it was a heavy-duty concrete fortress built for preservation of these film stocks, to keep them from exposure to the elements. Many of these films were suffering from "vinegar syndrome" in the film cans, and this was under controlled conditions.
So I'm wondering what is different about cigarette butts that they are also cellulose acetate (made from wood pulp: also known as Rayon) and not subject to the same "vinegar syndrome"? They are combustible, so they have to decompose over time as any combustible does. Only non-combustibles are truly non-biodegradable.
again, interesting, but i don't see this as being of any relevance. so what if it cellulose acetate degrades moderately slowly, slowly, or not at all? either way, in the case of a smoked cigarette, i would guess that a significant proporation of the chemicals and radiation trapped in the filter would leech back out in the presence of water or weather. how could it not?
what exactly do you propose that would somehow bind all the original toxins into the filter, making it safe for the environment? not to mention the toxins in the remnants of the tobacco in the rest of the butt...