The majority of European
ships are scrapped years later in Southeast Asian coastal junkyards under
questionable working conditions and environmental controls. The EU is looking
for ways to improve the situation.
A seven-kilometer-long (4.3-mile) stretch
of beach in Bangladesh is providing work for around 150,000 people. The largest
ship scrap yard in the world has emerged near the city of Chittagong in the
last four decades here. Around 40 percent of high seas vessels removed from
service worldwide are stripped down and broken apart here each year. Sales of
doors, kitchens or beds from the ships is booming around Chittagong.
Poor working conditions
Other countries in the region, such as
Pakistan and India, also serve as the end destination for many ships. But the
business has a dark side: low wages for workers, poor security standards and
environment impacts from substances released as the ships are dismantled.
Filmmaker Shaheen Dill-Riaz observed the
junkyards in 2008 and said, "There are injuries caused by falling ship
parts or tears in ropes, through which the workers can lose a leg or an arm -
that's simply part of everyday life there."
In his German-language film
"Eisenfresser" (Iron Eaters), Dill-Riaz, who is from Bangladesh but
has lived in Germany since 1992, illustrates the difficult conditions ship
junkyard workers encounter.
Dill-Riaz says he finds it especially
disgraceful that the Bangladeshi government as well as European shipping
companies, from the fleets of which around 75 percent of the boats in question
come, simply look away.
"One doesn't just leave old
automobiles sitting out somewhere," the filmmaker explained, adding,
"You have to bear the costs of getting rid of it - why shouldn't it work
that way with ships, too? It's just a question of will."
Sharing the burden
The European Union now wants to see
European shipping companies take on more responsibility for disposal of the
vessels. Currently, ships in service in Europe can be sold to non-EU countries
after about eight years, and only scrapped many years later. Under this scheme,
the costs for doing so fell to the most recent owner, rather than the first
owner.
Thanks to an initiative by members of the
European Parliament, European shippers may soon have to pay three cents per ton
freighted into a special fund once they dock at EU harbors. For a 100,000 ton
shipment, that translates to a 3,000-euro fee, which will then flow to junkyard
operations in Southeast Asia. It's a kind of disposal tax, which would be
intended to improve working conditions and environmental standards.
But European shipping companies seem
disinclined to share the costs for ship scrapping.
"The fact that a ship landing in a
junkyard after however many years may originally have had a German owner does
not mean that this first owner should be held responsible for some unapproved
scrap disposal," said Ralf Nagel, head of the Association of German
Shippers (VDR).
Nagel would prefer to see quick
implementation of existing regulations, like the Hong Kong Convention of 2009,
which establishes that scrap disposal must take place under humane and
environmentally-friendly conditions. The Hong Kong Convention has yet to be
ratified.
"The suggestions from Brussels will
undermine this agreement," Nagel believes, adding: "Which doesn't
help the people one is intending to help at all."
Nagel rejects the disposal fund proposal as
a "solely EU" solution in which the collected money is unlikely to
actually arrive in Southeast Asia. Even if the money lands in the right place,
the VDR head says that wouldn't solve the problem: "The European
Parliament has good intentions, but it would really only create at best a few
green recycling islands - but no concrete help for the people there."
Seeking a solution
Dill-Riaz also points a finger at the UN's
International Maritime Organization (IMO).
"The IMO could compel its members to
bear some responsibility - the organization is aware of who is selling these
ships, but doesn't own up to that," the filmmaker said.
But the ship junkyards cannot be closed,
despite questionable on-site conditions, Dill-Riaz added. "It would be
unfair to the people - they've been doing it for 40, 50 years. That's part of
the economy; people are involved. You have to find a solution within the
system."
Despite the enormous investments costs, new
and more modern disposal docks could be built, Dill-Riaz says. People would
then have a safer and greener coastal workplace.
Source: 2
April 2013
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