Soenke Zehle on Fri, 8 Feb 2002 10:35:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Toxic WTC Scrap Ends Up In India |
Dumping Potentially Hazardous World Trade Center Steel Debris is Danger to People and Environment People's Union for Civil Liberties January 29, 2002 Environmentalists and trade unions are up in arms over more than 30,000 tons of possibly contaminated scrap that was shipped from the wreckage at the World Trade Center to India. Below is a protest letter from a citizen's group in Chennai, the port city where the scrap was sent, to local and national officials. For more information see: Trading in Disaster: World Trade Center Scrap lands in India http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=1608� To: The Hon'ble Minister, Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India, New Delhi. The Hon'ble Minister, Department of Environment, Government of Tamil Nadu, Fort St. George, Chennai. Ms. Sheela Rani Chunkath, IAS, Chairperson, Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board, Guindy, Chennai. Chairman, Chennai Port Trust, Chennai. Commissioner, Corporation of Chennai, Rippon Building, Chennai. Sirs/Madam, We are shocked to know that for the last one month more than 30,000 tonnes of potentially hazardous steel and other waste scrap from the site of the September 11th World Trade Center (WTC) disaster in New York has been unloaded in Chennai and stored in a site in Manali. What shocks us is that the scrap has reportedly been unloaded without proper certification as to its safety and non-hazardous character. We are informed that the first consignment of the scrap reportedly arrived in early January onboard the Maltese vessel Brozna. Two other ships, Shen Quan Hai and Pindos, have subsequently arrived with a cargo of scrap. Reports say that the latter two vessels are said to be carrying WTC scrap. Pindos is currently berthed in Chennai Port and is scheduled to sail on 7 February. Although steel scrap is legal trade, the manner in which the World Trade Center scrap was created raises concerns of toxic contamination. This is not ordinary scrap. Everything in the World Trade Center, including mercury-containing tubelights, carcinogenic asbestos insulation, PVC articles, and computers was incinerated after 91,000 liters of jet fuel ignited in the buildings. TV reports of the clearance of the wreckage showed the US workers dressed in full-body protection and gas masks. If the US workers required such protection, don't Indian workers also require similar gear? Given the almost total lack of similar safety standards in Indian ports, the immediate impact will be felt by the ill equipped workers downloading the scrap using their hands and feet. The matter of concern, however, is not just the issue of protective gear; the danger is much larger than that. The US Environmental Protection Agency is already moving to characterize the WTC site as a Superfund (high levels of toxic pollutants) site because of the elevated levels of poisonous substances found there. There are no safe levels of exposure to cancer-causing substances like asbestos, PCBs, and dioxins, or to toxic metals like cadmium, mercury and lead. Once ingested or inhaled, these substances resist degradation or excretion and tend to build up to dangerous levels in the body. Unless there is clearcut evidence that the steel scrap and waste is totally free of carcinogenic and toxic contamination, and in particular unless there are analytical reports that prove the absence of asbestos dust/fibres, polychlorinated biphenyls, dioxins/furans, cadmium, mercury and other toxins in the waste, further off loading of the waste should be immediately halted and the removed waste returned to the US. We are deeply concerned at reports that the US Government has "overlooked" this critical possibility and has allowed the export of potentially contaminated scrap without adopting the required precautions in terms of testing the scrap for contaminants prior to export, and informing the Indian authorities accordingly. What causes still greater concern is the attitude of the Indian authorities, notably the Customs, Port and the Ministry of Environment officials. Though they were informed about the danger by several trade unions like CITU, HMS and AITUC and various environmental organisations, the Government bodies continue to slumber and remain inactive. PUCL demands to know whether the Government of India has ascertained whether the US Government issued a Certificate of Safety as per the BASEL CONVENTION, or at the least certified that the Convention does not apply, before the government permitted the offloading of the steel and other waste of the September 11th WTC building wreckage. If the US government had not issued such a certificate, PUCL demands to know why M/s Sabari Exim Pvt. Ltd, of Manali, Chennai was permitted to unload the wastes from the three ships. PUCL also demands that further off loading of waste be immediately stopped and the Pindos not permitted to leave Chennai port until the matter is thoroughly investigated. The entire episode again exposes the hypocrisy, dishonesty, and lack of standards of the first world countries when disposing their hazardous wastes in poorer nations. If the potential for contamination is high enough that they cannot store the waste themselves, how ethical is it to claim the fig leaf of open markets as a cover for exporting it? A poison is a poison, regardless of the wealth of the person it sickens or kills. However, such dumping is also a black mark on the Indian authorities. This is not the first time official agencies have connived with those dumping wastes and ignored the possibilities of deadly contamination. Under the Environment Protection Act, it is the duty of the customs and port authorities to ensure that all waste entering India has obtained the requisite clearances and certificates. We have learned that this has not taken place in this case. It is time that these officials are held liable for not enforcing safety standards and failing to discharge their basic duty to protect the citizens of India. As such, we also demand that an immediate investigation be launched into the entire affair and the public informed of the investigation's findings. If the investigations reveal that the waste is hazardous and that officials colluded in permitting it to be offloaded, then all the concerned officials in various government agencies must be forthwith prosecuted for permitting hazardous wastes to be dumped into India. Finally, we have been informed that some of the WTC scrap off loaded in Kandla port has already been removed and distributed without any certification as to its safety. It is imperative that this be stopped. Orders must also be given to seal the entire site where the wastes have been stored until toxicity and pollution control tests are completed and a final decision taken about the waste. Until then, further unloading must be stopped. We enclose a chart outlining the possible contamination of the WTC waste. We anticipate immediate action on the issue before it becomes a major environmental hazard. Yours sincerely, V. Suresh (Dr.V.Suresh) Secretary, PUCL-TN/Pondicherry For more information, please contact: People's Union for Civil Liberties Sudha Ramalingam, Member-National Council TN & Pondy 32 Kachaleeswarar Agraharam Street, Off. Armenian Street Chennai - 600 001 INDIA Tel: 5233639 Tele-fax: 5245412 E-mail: [email protected] _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold