Guest guest Posted December 30, 2004 Report Share Posted December 30, 2004 Massachusetts ranks third in nation on PVC products incinerated http://www2.townonline.com/saugus/atGlance/view.bg?articleid=154759 The Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow released a national report today documenting the health and environmental hazards posed by PVC (the " poison plastic " ) during manufacturing, product use and disposal. Massachusetts incinerates a higher percentage of PVC waste than all but two states in the nation, topping 28,145 tons every year according to estimates in the report. PVC is widely used in plastic pipes, building materials (such as vinyl siding), consumer products (such as toys or tablecloths) and disposable packaging. PVC disposal is the largest source of dioxin-forming chlorine and hazardous phthalates in solid waste, as well as major source of lead, and cadmium. " PVC, Bad News Come in Threes: The Poison Plastic, Health Hazards, and the Looming Waste Crisis " concludes that billions of pounds of PVC are being thrown away in the U.S. - but there is no " away " as PVC waste poses perpetual hazards. " Burn PVC waste in incinerators as Massachusetts does in high volume and it changes to cancer-causing dioxin, " said Luppi, Clean Water Action Organizing Director. " Bury it in landfills and it pollutes groundwater. Recycle PVC products and they contaminate the recycling process. " Disposing of PVC in incinerators and landfills poses long-term problems, including the emission of highly toxic dioxin emissions and leaching of toxic additives such as cadmium and lead into groundwater. Communities are increasingly concerned about the PVC-generated chemical emissions from incinerators and landfills in Massachusetts, which hosts seven operating incinerators including the Wheelabrator incinerator in Saugus. The Saugus facility burns over 1,500 tons of trash per day, or approximately 15 percent of all waste incinerated in Massachusetts. Pollutants captured by emission controls are concentrated in the incinerator ash sent to local landfills. " Saugus and neighboring communities deserve relief from this toxic cocktail of pollution caused by the incineration of PVC products, " said Fae Saulenas, co-president of SAVE. " Dioxin causes cancer, and harms our reproductive and immune systems - we must stop its build-up in the food we eat and in our water supplies. " Health damage associated with these toxic chemicals include Dioxins, a family of chemicals formed as a by-product of PVC incineration, are known to cause cancer, reproductive developmental and immune problems. Dioxins are hazardous in minute quantities, are very persistent and accumulate in the food chain, particularly in animal fat cells. Phthalates have been shown to cause developmental and reproductive damage in animals, and have been linked to the development of respiratory problems in children. Lead is a well-known cause of neurodevelopmental problems. Cadmium causes cancer and kidney damage. The report estimates that 70 billion pounds of PVC plastic are slated for disposal in the next decade. And, the problem is going to get worse. Disposal rates are expected to sharply increase as an estimated 125 billion pounds of PVC installed in the last 40 years in construction and other long lasting uses will need to be disposed of as it reaches the end of its useful life. A growing number of corporations are phasing out PVC, including Nike, Samsung and Firestone. The Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow joined with the report authors, Center for Health, Environment & Justice and the Environmental Health Strategy Center, in sending a letter to & and Microsoft Corporation to urge them to phase out PVC use. These corporate targets are large users of PVC packaging such as Microsoft's blister packs on computer software products and and 's Kids Detangling Shampoo bottles. AHT urged consumers to check for a " 3 " or " v " and avoid PVC products, noting " bad things come in three's - pollution, health hazards and the looming waste crisis. " AHT is also backing legislation in Massachusetts, which targets the chemicals emitted during the PVC lifecycle, including dioxin emitted during incineration of PVC and lead and phthalates that can escape from PVC products during their use. The " Safer Alternatives " legislation, re-filed last week, would promote the use of safer alternatives to these chemicals whenever feasible. " Some major medical device manufacturers are switching from using PVC to avoid direct patient exposure to phthalates, as well as the public and environmental health impacts of PVC throughout its life cycle, said Ted Schettler MD, MPH of the Science and Environmental Health Network. " Companies realize that protecting the public health and the environment is the right thing to do and makes good business sense. " " Given that there are viable alternatives for virtually every use of PVC, the common sense solution to the PVC disposal crisis is not to make it in the first place, " said Bogart, spokesperson for the Healthy Buildings Network. " Innovative companies like Firestone are shifting the market towards more environmentally friendly plastics - large users like Microsoft and & s should follow their lead. " Goods with a relatively short-useful life make up 71 percent of the PVC found in solid waste. Blister packs (hard plastic packaging often used for toys or computer supplies) and other vinyl packaging account for the largest portion of short-lived PVC products (Pg. 11 Report). More than 14 billion pounds of vinyl are produced annually in North America (Vinyl Institute). * The material in this post is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html <http://oregon.uoregon.edu/%7Ecsundt/documents.htm> http://oregon.uoregon.edu/~csundt/documents.htm <http://oregon.uoregon.edu/%7Ecsundt/documents.htm> If you wish to use copyrighted material from this email for purposes that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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