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Cleaning up the Most Toxic Pollution in the World

Hugh Pickens writes "Blacksmith Institute has published their list of the most polluted sites in the world compiled by comparing the toxicity of the contamination, the likelihood of it getting into humans and the number of people affected. For example, ninety-nine percent of the children living in and around the poly-metallic smelter at La Oroya in Peru, owned by the Missouri-based Doe Run Corporation, have blood lead levels that exceed acceptable limits. Scientific American says that despite the massive pollution, it would be relatively cheap and easy to clean up the most dangerous hazards. For $15,000, the radioactive contaminated soil from the Mayak plutonium facility on the shore of the Techa River in the Russian town of Muslyomova could be dug up, saving an estimated 350 lives. 'For about $200, the cost of a refrigerator, we are able to save someone's life,' says Richard Fuller, founder of Blacksmith."

16 of 212 comments (clear)

  1. Polluted Sites? by chromozone · · Score: 5, Funny

    I didn't see MySpace on the list

    1. Re: Polluted Sites? by chuckymonkey · · Score: 4, Funny

      Contaminated isn't the word for Myspace. More like blight on the face of humanity that seeps glittery pus over open wounds reeking of rotten meat and cheese. Also it is painful to look at.

      --
      "Some books contain the machinery required to create and sustain universes."-Tycho
    2. Re: Polluted Sites? by dgun · · Score: 4, Funny

      Contaminated isn't the word for Myspace. More like blight on the face of humanity that seeps glittery pus over open wounds reeking of rotten meat and cheese. Also it is painful to look at.

      I'm so putting that on my blogz, lolz.

      --
      FAQs are evil.
  2. WTB!! by Berenger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Please tell me more about this $200 fridge.

    1. Re:WTB!! by datapharmer · · Score: 5, Funny

      It has two wire shelves that are not adjustable. There is no light when you open the door. It doesn't get particularly cold and there is no ice-maker, but if you fill the ice tray it might actually freeze if you turn it to coldest and keep it closed for 24 hours. The door has no built in shelving, and it has a place on the handle where you can put a lock. It is 4.1 Cubic Feet and commonly found in hotel rooms with little itsy bitsy alice-in-wonderland size bottles of things to drink in it that will quadruple your hotel bill in one night.

      Now you know.

      --
      Get a web developer
  3. Outsourcing by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every time I see a company go overseas to do this kind of thing, it breaks my heart.

    We should ensure that any company that does work overseas, does it to US or higher standards. The includes Nike paying US minimum wages and Exxon following US pollution guidelines.

    --
    I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
    1. Re:Outsourcing by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yep, because when Nike doesn't go in somewhere to charge $.50 an hour to make shoes, alternative jobs will magically spring up that pay the people $7.25. What's more likely is the competition from Nike would have driven up the cost above what they could get without Nike.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  4. certain weeds can fix this by wizardforce · · Score: 4, Interesting

    certain weeds of the Astragalus and Stanleya Genus can clean up areas high in selenium and plants that have high levels of glutathione can help mop up cadmium and other toxic metals. the Astragalus especially can take up oxyanions of the chromium group [molybdenum and tungsten, likely chromium as well] not only that but bacteria like deinococcus radiodurans can withstand high radiation levels can interestingly they bind metals to certain chemical groups, specifically sulfur and selenium compounds. they can also reduce metal ions common to toxic waste sites and in effect lock them up as mineral deposits so that they are not leaching into water supplies. If the metals are not mobile, they are not nearly as poisonous or dangerous as they are leaching into the local water supplies.

    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
  5. Oil Sands by flyingfsck · · Score: 4, Funny

    Bah, the worst pollution is the oil sands in Northern Alberta - billions of tons of polluted sand - now being meticulously washed clean by the big oil companies. The oily gunk so removed is then distributed for disposal in millions of privately owned mobile incinerators, leaving behind nice clean sand for future (post global warming) children to play in and build sand castles on the pristine arctic beaches...

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  6. Russian village huge human nuclear experiment by AHuxley · · Score: 4, Informative
    Yes it does get much worse.
    Not just toxic sites, but you must stay so the gov can study you!
    From birth to death, generation after generation.


    Small clip about the people around Mayak, a 1950's nuclear fuel reprocessing plant on the River Techa, Russia.
    It "leaked". http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OR1wo5s3Ua4

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  7. Re:Mental Pollution is Borderless by clarkkent09 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    while 7 of the top 10 real polluters are Soviet/Russia and China.

    I am not nitpicking when I point out that those are 7 out of 10 most polluted cities/areas, not the biggest polluters. Not the same thing.

    If you bother to check the actual data USA consistently comes up in top 5 biggest polluters both per capita and overall. China and (not Soviet anymore) Russia are right up there as well to be sure, but ranting about media propaganda and hypocritcal AlGore elitists doesn't reveal anything about the actual problem, only about your political preferences (and perhaps what radio stations you listen to).

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  8. The value of litigation. by mosb1000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Many of the "companies" you are citing are or were principally owned by government organizations, and are/were immune from litigation. In the cases where they weren't, they were situated in countries where the law does not provide any kind of protection or possible recourse for the poor.

    For all you people who complain about litigation, this is why we have it. If your actions adversely affect others, they can seek financial compensation and punitive damages. This has the effect of correcting negative eternalitys if and when they are discovered, and giving people good reason to be careful in determining all the effects of their actions.

  9. Re:Borders. by mh1997 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I need a map with country border on it

    I hear you can obtain one of those at your local bookstore. Some other options are things called "atlases" and "globes".

    I personally have such as heard such as a reliable source saying that she believes many US Americans don't have maps, and such as Asia, and such as think of the children. So a comment such as yours is wrong.
  10. Re:Dioxin, sure, but DDT? No. by kcelery · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I think pesticide that does not decompose as DDT is not a good idea. In around the 60s, there was once a virgin forest in northern China, the trees were infected with some bugs. Some guys brought in 6-6-6 to spray the area by plane. The bug issue was then under control. 30 years later, farmers deforest some of the area and grow crops because it is supposed to be a pristine virgin land. Crops sent to Japan were rejected because of pesticide overdose. Those farmers sworn that they have never used pesticide on those farm land. Then some one skeptic went to investigate and found the pesticide were remained by the spray 30 years ago.

    I know people have to use chemicals to control insects. The ones that does not disintegrate is not a good idea.

  11. Re:Mental Pollution is Borderless by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It works like the "war on terror", the US makes a mess overseas so it doesn't have to clean up at home. /ducks

    Seriously though, it IS about consumption and the methods used to sustain and grow it. The US consumes ~50% of the worlds resources with only ~5% of the population, China and India are busy posioning themselves to stock the shelves of the western world just as Detroit did in the 50's only on a much larger scale.

    "To find out if the Slashdot crowd honestly cares about the enviroment, or are simply hypocritcal AlGore elitists, just watch how this thread gets moderated."

    Well atm you have +4 interesting and the number of posts on any environmental issue shows a lot of slashdotteres "care" about the issue one way or another. Personally I think I have "cared" about the environment since my parents raised me that way nearly five decades ago. I have no idea if I am an "Al Gore elitist" but I can tell you how the climate, bird and animal species have changed in my small corner of Australia over the last 40yrs.

    Gore's documentry is just that, a documentry, it's a "slide show" for laymen that spells out what the IPCC reports say, Al Gore is simply demonstrating his personal and political support for the findings in the reports (ie: they are not "his ideas"). Gore was initially skeptical of AGW but was persuaded by (amoung others) Hansen to change his mind. Regardless of what else Gore has done I would have thought an influential politician with the ability to be skeptical of his own ideas and interested enough to take the time and effort needed to understand the science behind a complex subject would be regarded as a GoodThing(TM), particularly on a "nerd" site.

    None of this means that governments of the developing world can shirk their responsibilty or that Al Gore doesn't (ironically) create a shitload of CO2 with his "personal presentations" of the movie to the likes of Bush, Murdoch, Howard, Blair, Putin, et-al. Economic infrastrature has outgrown single nations (eg: oil/gas pipelines, telecomms, food production, ect), what is missing is a coherent science based plan "to preserve the commons" on a scale bigger than any single nation. However as soon as one mentions "global plan" it's "OMG Stalin" rather than "hmmm, the plan to remove lead from car emmisions seems to be working".

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  12. Americans responsible for Chernobyl? by Nymz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It works like the "war on terror", the US makes a mess overseas so it doesn't have to clean up at home.
    Are you seriously going to tell me you didn't read the article? That Chernobyl was due to greedy Americans consuming so much energy? That any of the coal, metal, or chemical manufacturing plants were equally unsafe and intentionally destructive to the enviroment because America made them do it?

    I personally look at facts and reality, and then I come to a conclusion. You appear to conclude that America is responsible for everything, and then twist any reality or new fact to fit.