On the eve of 'World No Tobacco Day', the global health body said that stamping out its use can help nations reduce large-scale environmental degradation.
China, Brazil and India are the largest tobacco leaf growers, with China accounting for 3.2 million metric tonnes produce.
In its first-ever report, 'Tobacco and its environmental impact: an overview', WHO said that the impact of tobacco cultivation on forests since the mid-1970s was a "significant cause for concern".
The global health body said there was evidence of "substantial and largely irreversible" loss of trees and other plant species caused by tobacco farming that make it a particular "threat" to biodiversity.
By the mid-1990s, more than half of the 120 tobacco- growing low and middle income countries, including India, were experiencing loss of 2,11,000 hectares (ha) of natural wooded areas annually--around 2,124 ha per country.
"In India, 68,000 ha of forests were removed between 1962 and 2002--an average of 1,700 ha annually," the report said.
It noted that tobacco causes soil erosion as it is usually planted as a single or monocrop, leaving the top soil poorly protected from wind and water.
"In India, monocropped tobacco in drylands has been described as the most erosive crop," the report said.
The global health body highlighted how tobacco threatens the development of nations worldwide while calling on the governments to implement strong tobacco control measures.
These measures include banning marketing and advertising of tobacco, promoting plain packaging of tobacco products, raising excise taxes and making indoor public places and workplaces smoke-free.
Stamping out its use would also help prevent millions of people from falling ill and dying from tobacco-related disease and also combat poverty.
The first-ever WHO report also highlighted the impact of this product on nature which like tobacco smoke emissions contribute thousands of tonnes of human carcinogens, toxicants, and greenhouse gases to the environment while tobacco waste is the largest type of litter by count globally.
"Tobacco waste contains over 7,000 toxic chemicals that poison the environment, including human carcinogens.
"Up to 10 billion of the 15 billion cigarettes sold daily are disposed in the environment. Cigarette butts account for 30-40 per cent of all items collected in coastal and urban clean ups," the report said while highlighting the impact of the product.
"Tobacco farming stops children from attending school. 10-14 per cent of children from tobacco-growing families miss class because of working in tobacco fields.
"Around 60-70 per cent of tobacco farm workers are women, putting them in close contact with often hazardous chemicals. Tobacco contributes to 16 per cent of all non-communicable diseases (NCDs) deaths," it said.
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