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Charity Hatches Creative Solution To Take On World's Most-Littered Item

This group has “bin thinking about the litter things in life.” Can you tell?
Cigarette butts are seen in a tree grille on January 13, 2012 in a Paris street. A Paris law will ban next summer smokers from throwing their butt in Paris streets at the risk of paying a fine of 35 euros. Each year 350 million cigarette butts are thrown on public highway, which represents 315 tons of wastes . AFP PHOTO / JOEL SAGET (Photo credit should read JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images)
JOEL SAGET via Getty Images
Cigarette butts are seen in a tree grille on January 13, 2012 in a Paris street. A Paris law will ban next summer smokers from throwing their butt in Paris streets at the risk of paying a fine of 35 euros. Each year 350 million cigarette butts are thrown on public highway, which represents 315 tons of wastes . AFP PHOTO / JOEL SAGET (Photo credit should read JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images)

One U.K.-based charity is leaning on some creativity to help curb how the most-littered item in the world ends up on streets.

Hubbub, known for its catchy environment-themed awareness campaigns, has grabbed international attention after asking smokers in central London to “vote with [their] butts” — cigarette butts, that is.

Using a changing set of divisive sports-related questions, the group hopes its bright, yellow ashtray outside one of the city’s tube stations will “jolt people out of their normal littering routine.”

Could England win the World Cup? We're staying positive! Our new #cigarettevotingbin is down on #villiersstreet. No one likes to see butts out on the street, vote with your butt & keep them off the street! #litter #design

Posted by Hubbub on Friday, September 11, 2015

“We’ve already had requests from around the world for the bin with many countries wondering how they can change the questions to reflect their country’s culture and interests,” the company wrote in a blog post.

Designed in collaboration with Commonworks, the voting bin campaign is the latest installment in a “Neat Streets” campaign launched earlier this year.

The charity says its goal is to increase awareness and reduce the number of cigarette butts that end up on sidewalks and roads.

In other parts of the city, the group turned its attention to another environmental offender: chewing gum.

According to Hubbub, it costs the city £1.50 to remove one 3-pence piece of gum.

So to send that message to Londoners, campaign organizers got crafty with a playful reimagination of childhood paint-by-numbers kits, asking pedestrians to stick their gum on “Peppermint Pointillist” panels to reveal some alarming stats about littering.

All photos courtesy of Hubbub

Clever, no?

The group says overall effectiveness and impact of its litter-curbing campaign will be evaluated in December.

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