The Noida Entrepreneur who Devised a Fix for Cigarette Waste

Cigarette butts may be tiny, but their environmental impact is vast. Naman Gupta is tackling the problem

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Cigarette butts may be tiny, but their environmental impact is vast. Naman Gupta is tackling the problem

On a cold January afternoon, inside a house in Noida’s Nangli village, 36-year-old Poonam and three other women sit huddled on the floor around a pile of fruit-shaped woollen plushies they have just made.

The scene feels rather unremarkable. These soft, colourful curios could easily pass for decorative objects found in any ordinary drawing room. But there’s one unexpected detail: they are stuffed with fibres recycled from discarded cigarette butts. Turning an everyday pollutant into something useful is the idea behind the work of 31-year-old entrepreneur Naman Gupta.

Growing up in Noida, Gupta was troubled by the sight of cigarette butts strewn across nearly every street and public area—and by the absence of any system to deal with the waste.

The scale of the problem remains staggering. Around 28.6 per cent of Indian adults (nearly 267 million people) use tobacco in some form, including cigarettes and bidis, according to the World Health Organization. It also reports that approximately 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are discarded globally every year, with India accounting for nearly 100 billion of them.

Cigarette butts are not just unsightly litter; they are a serious environmental hazard. The filters are made of cellulose acetate, a type of plastic that can take many years—or even up to a decade—to break down completely in the environment. As they linger in soil, waterways, and on streets, these butts slowly leach a cocktail of toxic chemicals—including nicotine, arsenic, lead, cadmium, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons—into the ground and water, where they can harm plants, fish, and other wildlife. These toxins can persist long after the butt’s surface appears to have faded, contaminating ecosystems and posing risks to organisms that mistake them for food or absorb their runoff. This is why cigarette butts are considered one of the most pervasive forms of plastic pollution and haza...

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