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Lobbyists Push Use of Deadly Asbestos in Developing Nations
WASHINGTON - A global network of lobby groups has spent nearly $100 million since the mid-1980s to preserve the international market for asbestos, a known carcinogen that's taken millions of lives and is banned or restricted in 52 countries, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has found in a nine-month investigation.
White asbestos is flaky and fibrous (BBC)
Backed by public and private money and aided by
scientists and friendly governments, the groups helped facilitate the
sale of 2.2 million tons of asbestos last year, mostly in developing
nations. Anchored by the Montreal-based Chrysotile Institute, the
network stretches from New Delhi to Mexico City to the city of Asbest in
Russia's Ural Mountains. Its message is that asbestos can be used
safely under "controlled" conditions.
As a result, asbestos use is growing rapidly in countries such as China and India, prompting health experts to warn of future epidemics of lung cancer, asbestosis and mesothelioma, an aggressive malignancy that usually attacks the lining of the lungs.
The World Health Organization says that 125 million people still encounter asbestos in the workplace, and the United Nations' International Labor Organization estimates that 100,000 workers die each year from asbestos-related diseases. Thousands more perish from exposures outside the workplace.
Dr. James Leigh, the retired director of the Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health at the Sydney School of Public Health in Australia, has forecast a total of 5 million to 10 million deaths from asbestos-related cancers by 2030, an estimate he considers conservative.
"It's totally unethical," Jukka Takala, the director of the European Agency for Safety and Health at Work and a former International Labor Organization official, said of the pro-asbestos campaign. "It's almost criminal. Asbestos cannot be used safely. It is clearly a carcinogen. It kills people."
Indeed, a panel of 27 experts convened by the WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer reported last year, "Epidemiological evidence has increasingly shown an association of all forms of asbestos ... with an increased risk of lung cancer and mesothelioma."
The asbestos industry, however, has signaled that it will fight to protect sales of raw fiber and finished products such as asbestos cement roofing and water pipes. Among its allies are industry-funded researchers who have contributed hundreds of articles to the scientific literature claiming that chrysotile - white asbestos, the only kind sold today - is orders of magnitude less hazardous than brown or blue asbestos. Russia is the world's biggest chrysotile producer, China the biggest consumer.
"It's an extremely valuable material," argued Dr. J. Corbett McDonald, an emeritus professor of epidemiology at McGill University in Montreal who began studying chrysotile-exposed workers in the mid-1960s with the support of the Quebec Asbestos Mining Association. "It's very cheap. If they try to rebuild Haiti and use no asbestos it will cost them much more. Any health effects (from chrysotile) will be trivial, if any."
McDonald's sanguine view of chrysotile assumes that employers provide proper dust controls, ventilation and protective equipment for workers, but public health experts say that such measures are uncommon in the developing world.
"Anybody who talks about controlled asbestos use is either a liar or a fool," said Barry Castleman, an environmental consultant based near Washington who advises the WHO on asbestos matters.
Fire- and heat-resistant, strong and inexpensive, asbestos - a naturally occurring fibrous mineral - once was seen as a construction material with near-magical properties. For decades, industrialized countries from the United States to Australia relied on it for countless products, including pipe and ceiling insulation, shipbuilding materials, brake shoes and pads, bricks, roofing and flooring.
In the early 20th century, reports of the mineral's lung-ravaging properties began to surface. By the century's end, millions of people were sick or had died from asbestos exposure, and billions of dollars in compensation had been paid to claimants.
Ninety-five percent of all the asbestos ever used has been chrysotile.
This sordid history, however, hasn't deterred the asbestos lobby, whose longtime leader is Canada. The federal government and the government of Quebec, where chrysotile has been mined for decades, collectively have given 35 million Canadian dollars to the Chrysotile Institute, formerly known as the Asbestos Institute.
Canada uses little asbestos domestically but it sent 168,000 tons abroad last year; more than half of that went to India. Canada has fought to keep chrysotile from being listed under Annex III of the Rotterdam Convention, a treaty that requires exporters of hazardous substances to use clear labeling and warn importers of any restrictions or bans.
Despite mounting pressure from public health officials to stop asbestos exports, Canadian officials continue to defend the industry.
"Since 1979, the government of Canada has promoted the safe and controlled use of chrysotile and our position remains the same," Christian Paradis, the natural resources minister in Canada's conservative government and a former president of the Asbestos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists in a written statement.
Amir Attaran, an associate professor of law and medicine at the University of Ottawa, calls the government's position unconscionable. "It's absolutely clear that (Prime Minister) Stephen Harper and his government have accepted the reality that the present course of action kills people, and they find that tolerable," Attaran said.
The Chrysotile Institute's president, Clement Godbout, said his organization's message had been misinterpreted.
"We never said that chrysotile was not dangerous," he said. "We said that chrysotile is a product with potential risk and it has to be controlled. It's not something that you put in your coffee every morning."
The institute is a purveyor of information, Godbout emphasized, not an international police agency.
"We don't have the power to interfere in any countries that have their own powers, their own sovereignty," he said.
Godbout said he was convinced that large asbestos cement factories in Indian cities had good dust controls and medical surveillance, though he acknowledged there might be smaller operations "where the rules are not really followed. But it's not an accurate picture of the industry. If you have someone on a highway in the U.S. driving at 200 miles per hour, it doesn't mean everybody's doing it."
The Chrysotile Institute offers what it describes as "technical and financial aid" to a dozen sister organizations around the world. These organizations, in turn, seek to influence science and policy in their own countries and regions.
Consider the situation in Mexico, which imports most of its asbestos from Canada. Promoting chrysotile use is Luis Cejudo Alva, who's overseen the Instituto Mexicano de Fibro Industrias for 40 years. Cejudo said he was in regular contact with the Chrysotile Institute and related groups in Russia and Brazil, and that he gave presentations in Mexico and abroad on the prudent use of chrysotile.
Dr. Guadalupe Aguilar Madrid, a physician and researcher at Mexico's federal Social Security Institute, said the Instituto Mexicano de Fibro Industrias had had a major influence on Mexico's workplace and environmental rules, which remain weak. The nation is on the cusp of an epidemic of mesothelioma and other asbestos-related diseases that could take 5,000 lives per year, the doctor said.
In Brazil, a state prosecutor is seeking dissolution of the Brazilian Chrysotile Institute, a self-described public interest group with tax-exempt status. The prosecutor charges in a court pleading that the institute is a poorly disguised shill for the Brazilian asbestos industry. The institute denies the allegation, saying it "ensures the health and security of workers and users."
In India, where the asbestos market is growing at the rate of 25 percent per year, the powerful Asbestos Cement Products Manufacturers Association, a trade group, has a close relationship with politicians and has received $50 million from the industry since 1985, according to government officials.
One of the group's specialties is "advertorials," faux news articles that extol the safety and value of asbestos products. An ad placed in The Times of India last December is typical. It said, among other things, that the cancer scourge in the West had come during a "period of ignorance," when careless handling of asbestos insulation resulted in excessive exposure. Such exposures are long gone, the ad said. It neglects to note, however, that asbestos either has vanished from products or has been banned in industrialized nations.
The asbestos lobby's argument hinges to a great extent on scientists who minimize the health risks of white asbestos.
Industry-funded science on chrysotile began in earnest in the mid-1960s, when damning studies on asbestos cast unwanted scrutiny on Quebec's then-thriving mines. Minutes of the Quebec Asbestos Mining Association's November 1965 meeting suggest that the group saw the tobacco industry as a paradigm: It "was recalled that the tobacco industry launched its own (research) program and it now knows where it stands. Industry is always well advised to look after its own problems."
The studies have proved helpful to an industry that's under growing pressure to disband. They're disputed by other scientists, who argue that chrysotile is clearly capable of causing mesothelioma and lung cancer.
"Is there a legitimate scientific question as to whether white asbestos is less dangerous (than blue or brown)? Yes," said Dr. Arthur Frank, a physician and professor at the Drexel University School of Public Health in Philadelphia. "But is it safe? No."
(This story is part of "Dangers in the Dust," a joint investigation by the BBC's International News Services and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. The consortium is a collaboration of some of the world's top investigative reporters. Launched in 1997 as a project of The Center for Public Integrity, the consortium globally extends the center's style of watchdog journalism, working with 100 journalists in 50 countries to produce long-term, transnational investigations.)
Read more on the investigation at PublicIntegrity.org and the BBC.



12 Comments so far
Show AllYou greedy heartless sons of bitches. Getting them hooked on the most addictive and deadly drug the US produces is not enough. Now you want to unload more poison into their lungs-----for a price of course.
Asbestos is addictive?????
Now I know I'm too old. Goodnight
>^^<
Are you making fun of me? I was talking about tobacco. It was funny though.
It was late, I was tired, I try to do better when I go for sarchasam..
>^^<
Asbestos..."It's an extremely valuable material," maybe this comes from one of those liberal professors conservatives love to rant about? This must be the kind of professor a conservative can support.
I don't normally rip capitalism, but this is a prime example where greed and profit, inherent w/in capitalism, drives people to be evil, inhumane, and cruel towards each other.
You don't normally rip on capitalism? Give it a good college try, you may be surprised where it leads you. Just consider where capitalism is taking us, and how likely we will be to try to stop it before it's too late.
Sadly, this is not news to me. It is not even secret in Canada that we do this.
The topic comes up once in a while, just to remind ourselves that we are still doing this.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Mr. Pat Martin (Winnipeg Centre, NDP): Mr. Speaker, I present a petition signed by literally thousands of Canadians who call upon the House of Commons to take note that asbestos is the greatest industrial killer the world has ever known and yet Canada remains one of the largest producers and exporters in the world, dumping nearly 200,000 tonnes of asbestos into underdeveloped countries every year.
The petitioners point out that Canada also spends millions of dollars subsidizing the industry and blocking international efforts to curb its use.
The petitioners call upon the government to ban asbestos in all of its forms and institute a just transition program for asbestos workers who may be put out of work and for the communities they live in; to end all government subsidies of asbestos both in Canada and abroad; to stop blocking international conventions, such as the Rotterdam convention, which are designed to protect workers from asbestos; and also, as the United States Senate has done, to recognize April 1 as asbestos disease awareness day.
Mr. Nathan Cullen (Skeena—Bulkley Valley, NDP): ... To the last point about the so-called time of restraint, the government found $250,000 to send to an asbestos lobby in Quebec to promote asbestos exports to other countries, while ripping it out of the walls of this place.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Mr. Pat Martin (Winnipeg Centre, NDP): Mr. Speaker, I would like to table today a petition signed by thousands of Canadians who call upon Parliament to take note of the fact that asbestos is the greatest industrial killer that the world has ever known. In fact, they point out that more Canadians die from asbestos than from all other causes combined in the workplace.
They also point out that, in spite of this, Canada remains one of the largest producers and exporters of asbestos in the world, dumping nearly 200,000 tonnes per year into underdeveloped and third world countries.
Therefore, these petitioners from all over Canada call upon the government to ban asbestos in all of its forms and institute a just transition program for the workers who still work in that industry, to end all government subsidies to asbestos, both in Canada and abroad, and to stop blocking international health and safety conventions designed to protect workers from asbestos, such as the Rotterdam convention.
Big business is like a tick on a dog.
They are dug in, and if you threaten their privileged wealthy status, or their cash flow, they will pull down ugly on your head.
It isn't so much that they don't want to quit making dangerous products.. it is that they can't.
They have a standard of living that they can't let go of. In their world, they are big shots.
Their children and family friends depend on them for vacations in Europe, the latest fashion trends in clothes and cars. Dental work, college, etc. They are like the Mafia Dons, dispensing favors.. But like the Royalty of France before the revolution many of the Royalty saw that a change was needed. but they couldn't give up their luxuries. The people actually had to haul them into public squares and behead them to rid themselves of the parasites. That is the only thing that will ever work. You won't vote them out. The only choices you have to vote for, have been vetted and only those who will play ball are allowed on the ticket.But this royalty is smart. They make sure most of the middle class have a car in every garage and a chicken in every pot.
What in the world could you pigs have against lungs? I suspect you have them too.
I know you are making money and your favorite book was written by Ayn Rand but Jesus, have a heart.
Imaging yourself lying in a hospital bed, gasping for breath, fearing each one might be your last.
You feel your old friend, the panic attack coming on and further fear that you won't be able to suppress it this time---- it will only drain what little breath you still have----and what little will you still have to fight for life, the only one you have for Christ sake---the only one. When this one is gone who knows? You know it's only a matter of time but still each moment is precious.
Are you saying that asbestos causes panic attacks or are you saying that the fear of not being able to breath does that?
That was a very sad description and very well written.
In my day I've changed alot of truck, and auto brakes, Asbestos was the best to have. Also used in insoluation of electrical wires, also fire walls.
Oh well one-day somethings the it thing, next week it's deadly poison..
Whats next, Smoking cures cancer? Water Causes cancer?
Is what it means to get too old?
>^^<
Yes, once upon a time, asbestos was magic, because it wouldn't burn!
O.K. corpoprate people who say there is no harm, try this.
In order to prove how very SAFE it is, why not roam about and dress your families in asbestos suits? They could come in very handy in Canada, when the relatives of the sick and dying get angry enough to set you all on fire!
How very awful, that something banned in 1st world countries is being promoted to 3rd world countries. If cheap products from these countries come here, will our government be prepared to test them for our public safety?
Let's see, from China, we've already had, anti- freeze in tooth paste, lead in paint, toys and jewelry, and awful mold in drywall.
Wow, this "non-burning" asbestos global economy will end the world faster than BP.