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Old 22-09-09, 02:00 PM
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Default From toxic waste to toxic assets, the same people always get dumped on


From toxic waste to toxic assets, the same people always get dumped on


Trafigura is just another case of global fly-tipping. It's all too easy for firms to protect profit and pass risk to the poor world

o George Monbiot
o guardian.co.uk, Monday 21 September 2009 21.00 BST

It was revolting, monstrous, inhumane – and scarcely different from what happens in Africa almost every day. The oil trading company Trafigura has just agreed to pay compensation to 31,000 people in Ivory Coast, after the Guardian and the BBC's Newsnight obtained emails sent by its traders. They reveal that Trafigura knew that the oil slops it sent there in 2006 were contaminated with toxic waste. But the Ivorian contractor it employed to pump out the hold of its tanker dumped them around inhabited areas in the capital city and the countryside. Tens of thousands of people fell ill and 15 died. While the settlement says that the slops could at worst have caused a range of short-term low-level flu-like symptoms, and anxiety, it is one of the world's worst cases of chemical exposure since the gas leak at the Union Carbide factory in Bhopal. But in all other respects the Trafigura case is unremarkable. It's just another instance of the rich world's global fly-tipping.

On the day that the Guardian published the company's emails, it also carried a story about a shipwreck discovered in 480 metres of water off the Italian coast. Detectives found the ship after a tip-off from a mafioso. It appears to have been carrying drums of nuclear waste when the mafia used explosives to scuttle it. The informant, Francesco Fonti, said his clan had been paid £100,000 to get rid of it. What makes this story interesting is that the waste appears to be Norwegian. Norway is famous for its tough environmental laws, but a shipload of nuclear waste doesn't go missing without someone high-up looking the other way.

Italian prosecutors are investigating the scuttling of a further 41 ships. But most of them weren't sunk, like Fonti's vessel, off the coast of Italy; they were lost off the coast of Somalia. When the great tsunami of 2004 struck the Somali coast, it dumped and smashed open thousands of barrels on the beaches and in villages up to 10km inland. According to the United Nations, they contained clinical waste from western hospitals, heavy metals, other chemical junk and nuclear waste. People started suffering from unusual skin infections, bleeding at the mouth, acute respiratory infections and abdominal haemorrhages. The barrels had been dumped in the sea, a UN spokesman said, for one obvious reason: it cost European companies around $2.50 a tonne to dispose of the waste this way, while dealing with them properly would have cost "something like $1,000 a tonne." On the seabed off Somalia lies Europe's picture of Dorian Gray: the skeleton in the closet of the languid new world we have made.

The only people who have sought physically to stop this dumping are Somali pirates. Most of them take to the seas only for blood and booty; but some have formed coastal patrols to prevent over-fishing and illegal dumping by foreign fleets. Some of the vessels being protected from pirates by Combined Task Force 151, the rich world's policing operation in the Gulf of Aden, have come to fish illegally or dump toxic waste. The warships make no attempt to stop them.

The law couldn't be clearer: the Basel convention, supported by European directives, forbids European Union or OECD nations from dumping hazardous wastes in poorer countries. But without enforcement, the law is useless. So, for instance, while all our dead electronic equipment is supposed to be recycled by licensed companies at home, according to Consumers International around 6.6m tonnes of it leaves the European Union illegally every year.

Much of it lands in West Africa. An investigation by the Mail on Sunday found computers which once belonged to the NHS being broken up and burnt by children on Ghanaian rubbish dumps. They were trying to extract copper and aluminium by burning off the plastics, with the result that they were inhaling lead, cadmium, dioxins, furans and brominated flame retardants. Tests in another of the world's great fly-tips, Guiyu in China, show that 80% of the children of that city have dangerous levels of lead in their blood.

In February, working with Sky News and the Independent, Greenpeace placed a satellite tracking device in a dead television and left it at a recycling centre in Basingstoke run by Hampshire county council. It passed through the hands of the council's recycling company, then found its way first to Tilbury docks on the Thames then to Lagos, where the journalists bought it back from a street market. Under EU law, used electronic equipment can be exported only if it's still working, but Greenpeace had made sure the TV was unusable. A black market run by criminal gangs is dumping our electronic waste on the poor, but since the European directive banning this practice was incorporated into British law in January 2007, the Environment Agency hasn't made a single prosecution. Dump your telly over a hedge and you can expect big trouble. Dump 10,000 in Nigeria and you can expect to get away with it.

If the mafia were to establish itself as an effective force in this country, it would do so by way of the waste disposal industry. All over the world the cosa nostra, yakuza, triads, bratva and the rest make much of their fortune by disposing of our uncomfortable truths. It suits all the rich nations – even, it seems, the government of Norway – not to ask too many questions, so long as the waste goes to far away countries of which we know nothing. Only when the mobs make the mistake of dumping it off their own coasts does the state start to get huffy.

The Trafigura story is a metaphor for corporate capitalism. The effort of all enterprises is to keep the profits and dump the costs on someone else. Price risks are dumped on farmers, health and safety risks are dumped on subcontractors, insolvency risks are dumped on creditors, social and economic risks are dumped on the state, toxic waste is dumped on the poor, greenhouse gases are dumped on everyone.

Another story that broke on the same day was the shifting, by Barclays, of £7bn of residential mortgage assets and collateralised debt obligations to a fund in the Cayman Islands. These were universally described by the media as toxic assets. Some traders also call them toxic waste. Everyone understands the metaphor even if they haven't thought it through: the banks seek to dump their liabilities while clinging on to their assets. Perhaps it comes as no surprise to find that Trafigura also runs a hedge fund, or that Lord Strathclyde, leader of the Conservatives in the House of Lords, is a non-executive director of that hedge fund.

That party, like New Labour, advocates the continuing deregulation of business. The Trafigura case, like the financial crisis, suggests that in business there are people ruthless enough to shut their eyes to almost anything if they think if they think they can make money. Business without regulation is scarcely distinguishable from organised crime. Regulation without strict enforcement is an open invitation to mess with people's lives. Tedious directives, state power and bureaucratic snooping – the interference that everyone professes to hate – are all that stand between civilisation and corporate hell.

From toxic waste to toxic assets, the same people always get dumped on | George Monbiot | Comment is free | The Guardian
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Old 22-09-09, 05:18 PM
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What he said - Just enforce the goddam laws...
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Old 22-09-09, 05:40 PM
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Quote:
...are all that stand between civilisation and corporate hell.
Fine. Go after the bad guys but spare us the hyperbole. Just a minimum of historical knowledge suffices to show that 'corporate hell' is a picnic compared to governmental hell.

15 dead? Really?
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Old 22-09-09, 07:11 PM
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Originally Posted by Benjamin View Post
Fine. Go after the bad guys but spare us the hyperbole. Just a minimum of historical knowledge suffices to show that 'corporate hell' is a picnic compared to governmental hell.

15 dead? Really?
Thats seems grossly naive. I don't think people on the receiving end of the East India Companies cannons would have been so blase. Corporations today simply have governments providing their muscle for them, but they are even less interested in the fate of those in the category "other" than states are.
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Old 23-09-09, 01:58 AM
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Part of it's the third world governments' fault too. If they refused to let this stuff in we wouldn't export it there.
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Old 23-09-09, 02:49 PM
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Originally Posted by contracycle View Post
Thats seems grossly naive. I don't think people on the receiving end of the East India Companies cannons would have been so blase. Corporations today simply have governments providing their muscle for them, but they are even less interested in the fate of those in the category "other" than states are.
Be that as it may, i think Ben's point still stands. A lot less people are likely to be killed by corporate criminals in the pursuit of profit than by politicians or religious leaders in the pursuit of an ideology....
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Old 23-09-09, 02:50 PM
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NB: Another movie about corporate malfeance... "The Informant" with Matt Damon

The Informant! (2009) - Synopsis (SPOILERS!)

It looks interesting...
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Old 23-09-09, 04:03 PM
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Originally Posted by Gilles de Rais View Post
Be that as it may, i think Ben's point still stands. A lot less people are likely to be killed by corporate criminals in the pursuit of profit than by politicians or religious leaders in the pursuit of an ideology....
Yeah?

Quote:
The transatlantic slave trade resulted in a vast and as yet still unknown loss of life for African captives both in and outside of America. Approximately 8 million Africans were killed during their storage, shipment and initial landing in the New World.[33] The amount of life lost in the actual procurement of slaves remains a mystery but may equal or exceed the amount actually enslaved.[34] These figures would indicate the total number of deaths at around 16 million.
Atlantic slave trade - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Now lets throw in those killed during the land enclosures, those who died at their looms or as a result of adulterated foods, of dieseases in overcrowded barracks, down the mines on a pittance wage, those worked to the bone and beyond over the last couple of centuries in the name of making someone else rich.

Capitalism thinks nothing of piling corpses high if there is profit to be made.
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Old 24-09-09, 11:18 AM
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Contracycle,

Slave traders were not, by and large, corporations and Gilles was talking about the present not the distant past.

Come on, who have killed more Iraqis: the US military, or KBR, Blackwater and the other mercenary corporates - or Iraqis themselves?

Quote:
Now lets throw in those killed during the land enclosures, those who died at their looms or as a result of adulterated foods, of dieseases in overcrowded barracks, down the mines on a pittance wage, those worked to the bone and beyond over the last couple of centuries in the name of making someone else rich.
As Archy the cockroach once observed IIRC, there are some people so unlucky that they run into an accident that started out to happen to someone else.
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Old 24-09-09, 02:10 PM
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To be fair, Contra was refering to capitalist abuses, not necessarily corporate abuses. The criticism was summed up by Ambrose Bierce, who defined 'piracy' as 'commerce as God made it.'

But even pirates follow certain rules. Exploitation is as old as animal life. The key thing, I say, isn't the exploitation, but the rules, in their variances and evolutions.
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