Environment
Asbestos Kept Off Global List of Toxic Substances
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Laura MacInnis [www.planetark.com]
Chrysotile
asbestos, a known human carcinogen, will remain off a global "watch
list" of toxic substances for at least two more years after countries
led by Canada blocked consensus in United Nations talks.
While it is now rarely used in Western nations because of health
concerns, asbestos remains common in developing world construction,
mostly as an additive to cement.
Parties to the Rotterdam Convention, an international treaty
governing trade in toxic substances, failed to agree to add chrysotile,
which represents 94 percent of world asbestos consumption, to a list of
more than 30 substances about which exporting countries must inform
importers before shipping.
"The lack of a decision at this time to list chrysotile asbestos
raises concerns for many developing countries that need to protect
their citizens from the well-known risks of this hazardous substance,"
UN Environment Programme chief Achim Steiner said after the Geneva
meeting.
Once used widely as an insulating and fireproofing agent in
buildings, ships and consumer products, asbestos has been shown to
cause cancers of the lung and other organs as well as breathing
disorders.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates at least 90,000 people die every year of asbestos-related diseases.
Canada, whose French-speaking Quebec province is a major asbestos
producer and exporter, led opposition to its addition to the list,
according to environmentalists tracking the talks.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Canadian officials say putting chrysotile asbestos on the list
would be tantamount to banning international trade in it and threaten
jobs.
But Alexander Mueller of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
said listing the substance would not prompt serious restrictions. "It
would not constitute a recommendation to ban its global trade or use,"
he said in a statement.
Proponents such as the European Union, Australia and Chile say the
watch list gives poor countries the chance to decide which potentially
hazardous products they want to receive and to exclude those they
cannot manage safely -- an issue with huge resonance following the
dumping of toxic substances in August in the Ivory Coast capital
Abidjan.
"At least 200,000 workers will be killed by asbestos disease before
the proposal to list asbestos can be tabled again," said Laurie
Kazan-Allen of the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat, who called
the failure to act "truly tragic."
But several developing countries including Kyrgyzstan, Ukraine and
India spoke against the addition of asbestos, largely due to concerns
that tighter trade rules would led to pressure for tighter domestic
regulations.
Countries will revisit the asbestos issue at a 2008 meeting of the
Rotterdam Convention signatories, where they will also consider the
addition of tributyl tin, used in paints for ship hulls, and the
insecticide endosulfan.
Reuters News Service - SWITZERLAND: October 16, 2006
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