Greenpeace accuses shipping industry of profiting from poison Suspected toxic ship for scrap investigated
Amsterdam, 4 October 2002 - Greenpeace activists boarded a ship in Antwerp
harbour this morning to investigate whether or not it contains hazardous
materials and to start preparing a public inventory of findings. The environmental
organisation is taking samples of the Greek owned ship, the 'Silver Ray',
because it is concerned the vessel is about to be exported as scrap to
a shipbreaking yard in Asia without first being cleaned of dangerous toxic
materials. Last night, Greenpeace screened a film on the 'Silver Ray's'
hull to highlight the human and environmental costs associated with dismantling
ships that still have toxic substances on board.
"Ship owners must provide public inventories of hazardous materials
on their ships as a matter of routine and guarantee dangerous substances
are safely removed before vessels are scrapped. By failing to do this,
they're exposing thousands of workers in Asia directly to poisons and
causing catastrophic environmental problems. In fact they even profit
from this practice which is totally unacceptable," said Greenpeace
campaigner, Frank Petersen.
The 'Silver Ray' is one of hundreds of ships that are sold to Asian scrap
yards every year. A new Greenpeace study released today weighs up the
shipping industry's economic gain from selling ships for scrap and the
human and environmental costs of breaking contaminated ships. It concludes
that shipping companies earn more than a billion US dollars from selling
scrap vessels every year but do not spend a penny on protecting people's
health and the environmental by cleaning their vessels of hazardous waste.
Costs of breaking contaminated ships borne by workers and people living
near shipbreaking yards include loss of livelihood, cleaning up polluted
sediments, asbestos exposure liabilities and death or disease caused by
exposure to toxic substances.
"By selling ships as scrap to Asia, ship owners can conveniently
divest themselves of any responsibility of the environmental hazards that
their ships contain. If they spent a fraction of their profits on cleaning
their vessels of poisons before they are scrapped, thousands of lives
would be saved and the Asian environment protected," added Petersen.
The results of this study will be presented to the delegates of to the
International Maritime Organisation (IMO) meeting in London next week.
The IMO will discuss the necessity of mandatory guidelines for ship owners
to stop the pollution associated with shipbreaking.
"A strong and mandatory framework must to be set up by the international
community to make sure ship owners are held accountable and liable for
their ships and any hazardous materials they contain," concluded
Petersen.
A full inventory of all hazardous materials Greenpeace finds on board
the 'Silver Ray' will be made public next week.
Remarkable ships Pacific Princess ('Love Boat') is on the Greenpeace list. More remarkable ships...
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