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.
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.
Global Network of Lobbyists Push Use of Deadly Asbestos in Developing Nations - Canada is Lobby's Leader
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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.
- 3 votes
This is all pretty bizarre-anything to make a buck. Well lets see how much money they are making when the lawsuits start pouring in..Oh but..that is probably 20 years down the line---why worry now? My father developed severe asbestosis and got his share of the class action lawsuit against Owens-corning. But it in no way made up for the difficulty he had breathing and even walking from one end of the room to the other in his later years.
- 3 votes
Yup, its a shame. Canada is the ringleader of asbestos and perhaps of deaths caused by it overseas.
I was shocked when I found out a few years back. Not so innocent on a lot of things...
Literally exporting poison to these countries who themselves are also apathetic and below quality standards and will contaminate the local populations' health.
- 2 votes
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