MAC: Mines and Communities

Canada's Commission For Environmental Cooperation Has Named The Key Toxic Polluters

Published by MAC on 2005-05-25
Source: Plantet Ark


Canada's Commission for Environmental Cooperation has named Anglo America, Noranda and Inco as the key toxic lead polluters throughout north America.

Meanwhile the Doe Run smelter in Peru is causing increasing anxiety among residents and medical authorities for the unacceptable burden of lead and sulphur dioxide it's loading onto local people - children in particular. Residents want to know how Doe Run's owner, wealthy US junk bond promoter Ira Rennert, can continue pleading poverty while failing to clean up his deadly act.

Lead Still North American Pollution Danger - Report

Story by Robert Melnbardis, Planet Ark

May 25, 2005

Montreal, Canada - Lead still tops the list of industrial pollutants in North America that can cause birth defects or developmental damage in children, even though lead pollution has fallen since the phaseout of leaded gasoline in the 1980s, according to a study released Tuesday.

In its 9th annual survey, the Montreal-based Commission for Environmental Co-operation said the metal and its compounds remain the leading developmental toxin released by industrial facilities, with much of it coming from just three base metal smelters in Canada.

"We see that lead comes out at the top of the list in terms of developmental toxicants and known or suspected carcinogens," said commission spokesman Evan Lloyd.

Lead can accumulate in the human body, harming the reproductive system and causing nervous system damage in fetuses and small children, which can lead to problems with their physical and mental development. It can also cause cancer.

Lead released into the environment totaled 43.4 million kilograms in 2002, accounting for 24 percent of the total release of 77 developmental toxins in the study of data submitted to the US and Canadian governments by 24,192 facilities in 2002.

Steps taken to reduce emissions of lead, such as eliminating leaded gasoline, have drastically cut its concentrations in the environment, the report said.

In the United States, lead concentrations in the air fell by 94 percent from 1983 to 2002, but the overall problem of lead emissions has not gone away, the commission said.

"It's contained -- in a majority of these instances in terms of volume -- in a relatively few, very large metal smelters and manufacturing facilities," Lloyd said.

Canadian industrial facilities representing 5 percent of those reporting emissions of lead and its compounds accounted for 42 percent of lead releases into the air in 2002, according the the report.

The top emitter of lead on site was a base metal smelter owned by Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting in Manitoba, a company spun off last year by Anglo American Plc.

The others in the top three were Noranda Inc.'s Horne smelter in Quebec and Inco Ltd.'s Copper Cliff complex in Ontario.

"Currently in Canada, there are no limits on lead air emissions from smelters, whereas in the United States ... there are various standards applied across the board," Lloyd said.

In a statement Tuesday, Canadian Environment Minister Stephane Dion said the government is aware of the problem and last year proposed measures that would reduce lead emissions from smelters by some 30 percent by 2008.

($US1=$1.26 Canadian)

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