ONTD Political

350 tons of toxic waste to be flown from India to Germany for treatment

10:13 pm - 06/16/2012
A German environmental agency will fly more than 350 tonnes of toxic waste from the Bhopal factory in India to Germany for disposal, it was announced on Friday.

The Indian government approved the controversial clean-up proposal for the site where a gas leak killed thousands in 1984.

The plan to have five special flights take the toxic waste to an as yet unnamed disposal site in Germany
was approved by India’s Interior Minister P. Chidamabaram and other senior ministers at a meeting in New Delhi.

"The ministers have given a green signal," a senior ministry official told news agency AFP, declining to be named. Other sources say the Indian government will pay €3.6 million for the project.

"The German Society for International Cooperation (GIZ) has been awarded the contract to transport the waste to Germany for disposal," he said.

Bonn-based GIZ is a government-run enterprise that works on international environmental issues and sustainable development.

Bhopal was the scene of the world's worst industrial accident in 1984 when the pesticide factory leaked toxic gas into nearby slums, killing thousands instantly and tens of thousands more over the following years.

Tonnes of chemical waste previously produced by the plant were left in pits around the site, polluting local water supplies. Residents have been campaigning for years for a thorough clean-up of the factory and the surrounding area.

Many experts believe that the presence of toxic waste has resulted in more birth defects and illnesses among successive generations of people living near the plant.


According to GIZ, the waste to be flown to Germany is not connected with the poison that leaked in the accident. Hans-Hermann Dube from GIZ claimed that analysis had shown the material heading for Germany contained low levels of pesticide and heavy metals.

Environmental group Greenpeace said it supported the clean-up idea but was not sure whether it made sense to send the waste to Germany.

source: The Local (Germany)
romp 17th-Jun-2012 04:02 am (UTC)
I can't believe they're finally cleaning up the site. Dow had refused, yeah?

Well, good.
tabaqui 17th-Jun-2012 04:09 pm (UTC)
Oh, was it a Dow plant? That's one of several companies who should be taken over by the govt. until they've cleaned up every fucking site they've ever contaminated.
romp 17th-Jun-2012 07:31 pm (UTC)
It was Union Carbide at the time but Dow bought that company in 2001. I only know of this from The Yes Men Fix the World. (their Dow info)
tabaqui 17th-Jun-2012 09:49 pm (UTC)
Okay, wow, *that* is a very cool link. Thank you!
tabaqui 17th-Jun-2012 04:08 pm (UTC)
Well, it makes sense to send it to Germany if there are no facilities that can handle it in India.

I cannot believe they'd let it go *that* damn long. Though, since it only affected 'slums'....

I hope it goes off without a hitch.
poetic_pixie_13 17th-Jun-2012 06:18 pm (UTC)
It only took 18 years. Of course considering the people who were hurt and killed it's not that surprising.

The way the poor are treated in India is just... ugh. Not that the poor are treated with much dignity anywhere in the world. It doesn't help that India pays more money paying back interest on their debts of the IMF and World Bank than on social services. Poverty and the way it's handled have gotten a lot better in the past 20 or 30 years but there's a long way to go.
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