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Beach Cleanup: Israeli Volunteers Remove 15,000 Cigarette Butts

Israeli volunteers clear 15,000 cigarette butts from beaches in nationwide cleanup event

Around 100 volunteers participated in a beach cleanup co-sponsored by ISRAEL21c this weekend, clearing away around 15,000 cigarette butts from beaches along Israel’s coast.

“There was a butt cleanup event going on in 13 countries and we represented Israel, organizing cleanups in Ashdod, Tel Aviv, Netanya and Herzliya,” Julian Melcer, the founder of Clean the Butts organization, tells ISRAEL21c.

“We also handed out some 2,000 pocket ashtrays. We usually sell them but this time we handed them out for free, and there’s no doubt that it’s easier and a more positive experience – people enjoy getting gifts,” he notes.

Volunteers cleaned cigarette butts from this beach in Herzliya on July 1, 2023.

Melcer founded Clean the Butts in 2018, launching the group with a beach cleanup in celebration of his 24th birthday. Since then, the group has cleared away more than 2.5 million cigarette butts from Israeli beaches, recycling some 300,000 of them.

It has also provided more than 40,000 smoking beach-goers with pocket ashtrays in a bid to replace the habit of burying cigarette butts in the sand.

Cigarette filters are gathered by Israeli volunteers taking part in a mass beach clean up during a one-day operation launched by some 20 Israeli associations to “beat the world record” for beach cleaning, on the shore of the city of Netanya on, October 30, 2020.“We also handed out some 2,000 pocket ashtrays. We usually sell them but this time we handed them out for free, and there’s no doubt that it’s easier and a more positive experience – people enjoy getting gifts.Volunteers cleaned cigarette butts from this beach in Herzliya on July 1, 2023.  PHOTO BY JACK GUEZ/GETTY IMAGES 

Recent years have seen the group focus on large events, lectures in schools and sales of the pocket ashtrays. Earlier this year, Melcer joined ISRAEL21c’s Keep it Magniv, a lifestyle brand for Gen Zs and millennials who care about the environment.

Clean the Butts founder Julian Melcer, third from left, with volunteers at a beach cleanup on July 1, 2023. Photo courtesy of Clean the Butts

This weekend’s event received great feedback, Melcer notes.

“There was so much appreciation for it,” he says. “We heard the words ‘thank you’ countless times, also from cleaning workers and inspectors. Everyone who saw it really appreciated it.”

Clean the Butts is planning more cleanups this summer, for example in the northern coastal city of Acre this upcoming weekend, as well as outreach operations and pocket ashtray sales.

 

 

 

 

Produced in association with ISRAEL21c

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