Page added on August 9, 2009
In addition to its cheap labor costs, China has another comparative advantage as the world’s factory: Companies often pay almost nothing to pollute China’s air, water and soil and to poison its people.
Need pliant workers to handle toxic chemicals? Wages are just $2.60 a day. What if the chemicals contaminate a town? Compensating a family of five costs just $732. Local water supply contamination makes 4,000 people vomit? That’s just $7 per household. Cost of bribing local Chinese officials to look the other way rather than adhering to safety standards? Well, that’s unknown, but given the frequency of China’s pollution atrocities, apparently it is cost-effective.
In the central province of Hunan, desperate citizens in Liuyang City have been trying to take to the streets again this week to protest unsafe operations at a government-protected factory. The pollution has already killed at least five people and poisoned another 500 with toxic pollution from cadmium and indium, metals used at the local factory.
About a thousand villagers from Shuangqiao, Jiankou and Puhua villages besieged a police station and city government headquarters last week to complain that the local government had failed to protect them from the deadly pollution.
This week, they didn’t get the chance to protest. Instead, thousands of police officers were deployed to seal off major government buildings in Liuyang to prevent another riot. At least eight journalists who tried to interview villagers or take photos of the factory were detained, and told they could rely on the government to give them all the information they needed, according to the South China Morning Post.
Residents blame the Xianghe chemical plant, which had been illegally producing indium, a metal used to produce thin-film coatings for lamps and for liquid crystal displays (LCDs) in flat-panel video screens. Last week, the riot drew publicity, forcing the government to shut down the illicit plant.
The factory opened in 2004. Workers there were paid 18 yuan ($2.6) a day–about the cost of a McDonald’s Happy Meal–to produce the highly toxic chemicals used to make the TVs which sell for more than an average worker’s yearly salary.
Indium compounds are highly toxic, and can damage the heart, kidney, liver or embryos of those exposed to it. Cadmium, also used at the plant, can cause short-term lung damage in humans who inhale it. Prolonged exposure to cadmium causes chronic kidney disease. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says exposure to cadmium probably causes cancer too.
Note: though the story doesn’t mention it, indium is also used in the production of solar panels. Compare Wikipedia
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