BRUSSELS: European,
Turkish and Chinese recyclers are set to benefit from strict new EU rules on
breaking up old ships, but the practice of dismantling them on beaches in South
Asia — at great human and environmental cost — will still be hard to stop.
Of 1,026 ocean-going
ships recycled in 2014, 641 were taken apart on beaches in India, Bangladesh
and Pakistan, according to figures from the NGO Shipbreaking Platform, which
campaigns for an end to the hazardous practice.
Tankers, cruise liners
and other old vessels are crammed onto beaches and stripped down by hundreds of
unskilled workers using simple tools such as blowtorches. Chemicals leak into
the ocean when the tide comes in.
There is also a human
cost: the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai estimates that some 470
workers have died in the past 20 years in accidents in Alang-Sosiya, the
world’s largest stretch of ship-breaking beaches, in Gujarat. Some 35,000
mostly migrant and unskilled workers operate there.
The new rules aim to
stop what Karmenu Vella, European Commissioner for the Environment and Maritime
Affairs, called “the shameful practice of European ships being dismantled on
beaches”.
They will require that
EU-registered ships be recycled only at sustainable facilities, and a list of
these is expected to be published next year. It is likely to include yards in
China, Turkey, North America and the European Union, but not South Asia.
“The European list will
split the market into a safe market and a substandard market,” said Patrizia Heidegger
of Shipbreaking Platform.
It will be the first
large-scale implementation of the International Maritime Organisation’s 2009
Hong Kong convention on ship recycling, which until now has only been ratified
by three countries — Congo Republic, France and Norway.
Low standards, high
profits: The incentive to part with an old vessel at a South Asian facility is
huge. Rules on disposing of asbestos, for example, are generally more lax,
meaning the profits for breaking up a ship are higher.
Depending on raw-material
prices, ship owners can make up to $500 per tonne of steel from an Indian yard,
compared with $300 in China and just $150 in Europe.
To counter this, the
European Commission is looking at ways to reward ship owners for recycling at
approved facilities, although details are still to be decided.
Indian shipyard owners
see the new rules as a ploy to fill empty yards in Europe. Fewer than 4 per
cent of all retired ocean-going ships passed through European facilities in
2014.
Haiderali G. Meghani,
director of International Steel Corporation, a large ship recycling firm based
in Alang, said concerns about poor safety and environmental standards in India
were misplaced. “We are almost near to European standards,” he said.
Source: The Dawn. 1
April 2015
http://www.dawn.com/news/1173107
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