Health

Tobacco’s effects beyond health

May 27, 2022

Global

Tobacco’s effects beyond health

May 27, 2022

Global
Aanisah Khanzada

Public Health Analyst

Aanisah Khanzada is a Public Health Analyst with Economist Impact. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Global Health and Social Medicine and a master’s degree in Public Health. Before joining Economist Impact, Aanisah had worked with organisations such as Cancer Research UK, the World Health Organization and the National Crime Agency. Aanisah is currently learning Russian and hopes to develop an area of expertise on pressing public health issues within the Eastern European region. 

The 2022 theme for World No Tobacco Day is tobacco’s threat to our environment. Tobacco use causes 8 million deaths worldwide each year and recent research has highlighted its environmental impacts, and how it might be an obstacle to achieving multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

An obstacle to achieving the SDGs

Tobacco cultivation continues to limit the full implementation of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) (FCTC), an international treaty developed in response to the . From crop cultivation to cigarette disposal, the tobacco lifecycle causes to environmental as well as human health.

Over the last 50 years, of forests have been lost, causing up to of annual greenhouse gas increases. of fertile land is used to grow tobacco, contributing to the irreversible loss of trees and biodiversity.  As a result of lower production costs and less stringent regulatory practices within low-and middle-income countries (LMICs), of tobacco cultivation and production takes place here.  Tobacco still remains the most common cash crop in LMICs due to factors such as its . However, this can be outweighed by the damaging environmental, and impacts caused by tobacco cultivation.

The required for tobacco cultivation results in poor soil health. In , chemicals used to kill weeds found in tobacco fields were responsible for polluting aquatic environments and reducing fish supplies. In , the shift towards tobacco production has increased food insecurity, due to traditional crops like cassava, millet and sweet potato becoming scarce.

highlights the importance of supporting farmers with economically viable alternatives to tobacco growing. have been completed in Kenya, Brazil and Uganda, demonstrating that there are suitable alternatives. Additionally, in the government has developed kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus)—a plant used for fibre and oil—as an alternative crop, whilst farmers in are switching to sunflower and soybeans.

The negative impacts of tobacco continue at cigarette disposal. Cigarette filters are the most littered item worldwide, with littered each year, causing environmental waste. , which contain plastics, can be carried into rivers and lakes before ending up in the ocean.

This burgeoning understanding of the intersection between tobacco’s impacts on the environment, economic development and health emphasises that these sectors must work together to counteract its effects.

Tobacco must be framed as a development and not just a health issue

The activities carried out from start to end of the tobacco lifecycle clearly negatively impact the ability to achieve many SDGs including,  Since the SDGs are deeply interwoven, a multisectoral approach with particular focus on LMICs is paramount to reducing the negative impacts of tobacco. As such, it is important that moving forward we frame the issue of tobacco as a threat to our overall sustainable development, rather than solely health.

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