EU safety rules for recycling yards
could save hundreds from injury and poisoning but pose dangers for south Asian
economies
Everything is recycled as workers in the ship breaking industry dismantle oil tankers by hand, under dangerous conditions. Photograph: Andrew Holbrooke/Corbis |
When the rusty, old supertanker Lara 1 reached Bangladesh two weeks ago,
the captain stoked up its engines for the last time and rammed it as far up the
beach at Chittagong as possible. The 70-metre tall, 400-metre long iron
colossus now squats in the mud in the Rising Steel ship breaking yard, waiting
to be picked over by an army of young men risking their lives for little more
than £1 a day.
The Lara 1 is one of the largest
corpses in the world's biggest graveyard of ships. A half-dismembered bulk
carrier lies on one side, the remains of a European car ferry on the other.
Beyond it, stretched along 12 miles
of what just a decade ago was a pristine sandy beach, ore carriers, container
ships, gas tankers, cruise liners and cargo ships of every size and description
are being dismantled by hand in 140 similar yards. Every year more than 250
redundant ships, many from Britain and Europe, come here to be broken up.
It will take gangs of oxyacetylene
cutters nearly six months to dismember the 42,000-tonne Lara 1. In the first
week, say its owners, oils, toxic sludges and other waste will be pumped out,
parts of the bow and some bulkheads will be removed and the recycling will
start. The cable, the steel, the generators, funnels, propellers, lifeboats,
companionways, sinks, toilets, even the lightbulbs and every nut and bolt of
the Lara 1 will be sold on the Bangladesh market, to be turned into construction
materials, girders, metal sheets and furniture. The sheet metal will be used
for riverboats and coastal craft.
"Every bit of this ship will be
recycled, reused and resold. Nothing will go to waste. This ship will help
build Bangladesh. We dismantle 2.5m tonnes of steel a year from Chittagong, but
we need four million tonnes to keep growing," says Hefazatur Rahman,
chairman of the Mostafa group of industries, which paid $20m to buy the Lara 1
for scrap, and could make $10m profit if world steel prices rise in the next
year. Or, he says, he could lose everything if they fall, as they did in 2008.
But now, in a move that India,
Bangladesh and other developing countries with major shipbreaking industries
say could wreck local economies, the EU has proposed laws stating that ships
registered in Europe should be broken up only in licensed yards meeting strict
new environmental guidelines. It estimates that up to 1.3m tonnes of toxic
materials on board end-of-life vessels are sent each year to Chittagong and
other shipbreaking yards in south Asia from the EU alone, with
"incalculable" risks to workers.
Under the system, outlined last
month in Brussels, European ships will have to remove toxic wastes before they
are exported, and ship recycling yards will have to meet strict environmental
and safety requirements. European ships will be recycled only in the best
yards.
Few yards in Bangladesh or India,
the world's two largest centres of shipbreaking, can expect to pass the
proposed standards without massive investment. Figures are hard to verify but,
say local Chittagong watchdogs, in the past 10 years hundreds of men working in
the 70 breaking yards have died or been maimed or poisoned. Many are from the
poorest communities in the country.
"On average, one worker dies in
the yards a week and every day a worker is injured. It seems like nobody really
cares. Workers are easily replaceable to the yard owners: if one is lost they
know another 10 are waiting to replace him. The government collects the taxes
and turns a blind eye," says Muhammed Shahin, an officer with local
watchdog group Young Power in Social Action.
"Explosions of leftover gas and
fumes in the tanks are the prime cause of accidents in the yards," he
says. Other accidents are caused by falls – because the men are not given
safety harnesses – or workers being crushed by falling beams or plates or
electrocuted.
Last week the Exxon Valdez, the ship
responsible in 1989 for one of the largest oil spills in US history, was sold
for scrap and is expected to be broken up on a beach in India or Bangladesh.
"It is outrageous that this
ship, which has already created one environmental catastrophe, is being allowed
to kill and pollute yet again," said Jim Puckett, executive director of
the Basel Action Network, which works to prevent the globalisation of the toxic
chemical crisis. "The ship's owner must be held accountable for simply
selling this toxic time- bomb and then walking away."
According to the YPSA, most workers
wear no protective gear and many work barefoot. "There is hardly any
testing system for the use of cranes, lifting machinery or a motorised pulley.
The yards re-use ropes and chains recovered from the broken ships without
testing their strength. Fires, gas explosions, falling steel plates, exposure
to poisons from bunker oil, lubricants, paints and cargo slop have left
thousands with respiratory diseases," says Shahin.
But the breakers insist that safety
conditions have improved. "We have changed. It is much safer now. It's
quite different," says Nazmul Islam, secretary of the Bangladesh Ship
Breakers Association. "We are installing modern equipment and are guided
by the international law. We have built a 150-bed hospital for workers. The
supreme court in Bangladesh has given us new directives, and we have
incinerators and separators. Compared with just three years ago, it's much
better. We now have storage facilities for asbestos."
But the EU environment commissioner,
Janez Potocnik, is not convinced. "Although the ship recycling sector has
improved its practices, many facilities continue to operate under conditions
that are dangerous and damaging. This proposal aims to ensure that our old
ships are recycled in a way that respects the health of workers as well as the
environment. It is a clear signal to invest urgently in upgrading recycling
facilities," he says.
What is certain is that shipbreaking
has become essential to Bangladesh's breakneck industrial growth. Apart from
providing nearly half the steel the country of 160 million people uses a year,
the government collects £70m in revenue from an industry that employs more than
20,000 people directly and as many indirectly.
Source: The Guardian. By John Vidal. 5 May
2012
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/05/bangladesh-workers-asia-shipbreaking
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