Speed read
- · Bangladesh’s ship-breaking industry is damaging the fragile ecology of its coastline
- · Waste oil and toxic materials have destroyed mangrove forests and affected marine life
- · Bangladesh risks losing out on the ship-breaking industry unless it tightens regulation
Bangladesh needs to tighten regulation over its booming ship-breaking
industry and bring it in line with international laws and environment
standards, says a new study.
The industry, according to the study due to be published in the July 2014
issue of Marine Policy, is expanding dramatically at the cost of the
environment. In the Sitakunda area, where most of the ship-breaking yards are
located, mangrove forests have vanished, according to one of the authors, Abdullah
Faruque, professor law at the Chittagong University.
“Sitakunda’s trees have been cut down to make way for the ship-breaking
industry,” says Mohd. Abdul Matin, general secretary of the Bangladesh Poribesh
Andolan, a prominent environmental non-government organisation. “New trees
don’t grow there because the soil is highly contaminated with toxic chemicals,”
he tells SciDev.Net.
"On top of this irreparable damage, we also face massive loss of
marine life,” says Matin. “Fish are often seen floating up dead in the
surrounding sea, and fresh water around the coastal areas of Sitakunda contains
many toxic chemicals."
Formalised in 2006, the industry had by 2012 allowed Bangladesh to
recover an estimated 1.5 million tonnes of steel. At the same time, according
to the study, thousands of tonnes of toxic substances such as asbestos, lead,
waste oil and other chemicals were discharged into the soil and sea.
Faruque says that changes in laws are necessary to ensure that the
ship-breaking industry continues to provide the country with valuable steel,
but without destroying its coastline and its valuable natural assets. Failure
to amend the laws, he says, could result in the countries of origin turning to
other destinations for the scrapping and disposal of their end-of-life ships.
“The aim of our evaluation was to demonstrate that Bangladeshi laws could
be incorporated into the core of the international regulatory instruments to
minimise the environmental damage caused by this industry,” Faruque tells
SciDev.Net.
“While the global operation of ship-breaking is regulated by a number of
international instruments, Bangladesh has neither incorporated any of them nor
developed comprehensive domestic legislation to address these concerns,”
Faruque says.
Syeda Rizwana Hasan, executive director of the Bangladesh Environmental
Lawyers Association, says, “It’s very unfortunate that even after restrictive
rulings by the highest court of the country the deadly industry continues to
expand. There appears to be no political will to bring the industry to order.”
Source: Sci Dev Net
http://www.scidev.net/south-asia/environment/news/ship-breaking-hurts-bangladesh-s-fragile-coasts.html
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