Laurie Kazan-Allen

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Towards the Light
Today, the world is a colder and sadder place. In Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, the family, friends and colleagues of Eric Jonckheere are gathering at Our Lady of Hope Church to pay their respects to a man who had, for decades, campaigned to ease the suffering of asbestos victims and end deadly exposures at home and abroad.
![]() Eric Jonckheere, President of the Belgian Asbestos Victims Association (ABEVA), died on December 13, 2024 from mesothelioma. |
It is hard to come to terms with the death last week of our dear friend and comrade in arms, the 5th member of a family whose lives were stolen by corporate greed. Erics father Pierre (1987), his mother Françoise (2000) and his brothers Pierre-Paul (2003) Stéphane (2009) all died from the same asbestos cancer which killed Eric (2024): mesothelioma. Erics two remaining brothers Xavier and Benoît continue to live with the Sword of Damocles over their heads, never knowing if/when they will be similarly affected. The toxic exposures they all experienced were caused by the negligence of Eternit, the multinational asbestos conglomerate that owned and operated the asbestos-cement factory in Erics hometown: Kapelle-op-den-Bos, Belgium.1
When his mother Françoise was dying, Eric and his brothers promised they would do everything they could to expose Eternits crimes. For years, they pursued a legal case against the company.2 Finally in 2017, the Brussels Court of Appeal upheld a ruling which condemned Eternit for the environmental asbestos exposure which killed Françoise Vannoorbeek-Jonckheere. Standing outside the Palace of Justice on the day the verdict was handed down (March 28, 2017) were scores of delegates representing asbestos victims groups from France, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Japan and Britain who were well aware of the global significance of this long-awaited decision.3
![]() |
![]() Chieko Kosuge traveled ~6,000 miles to witness this historic event; her husband and father-in-law died from exposure to Eternit asbestos in Japan. Photo courtesy of ABAN. |
By piercing Eternits cloak of invincibility, the Jonckheeres and their legal advisors had done what no one had done before: publicly exposed the crimes the companys decision-makers had committed. More was to come in 2023 when a Flemish-speaking court convicted Eternit of intentional wrongdoing, deliberate misconduct, systematic manipulation and deliberate distortion of the facts in a case brought by Eric, who had been diagnosed with mesothelioma on February 4, 2021: International Cancer Day.4
Erics transition from bereaved son to global advocate saw him harness his profound grief into a phenomenal force for good. People came to hear his story but stayed to tell theirs. The bonds forged from their personal tragedies morphed into links in a global chain via which strategies were discussed and actions taken. Erics unique combination of joie de vivre, empathy and humor were irresistible. He always brought something special to the conversation. We loved him for that.
![]() Eric addressing a ban asbestos street rally on Workers Memorial Day (April 28, 2009), Hong Kong. Photo courtesy of ABAN. |
![]() Eric bringing some levity into his presentation at the meeting of the Asian Ban Asbestos Network (A-BAN) in Bandung, Indonesia on October 17, 2010. Photo courtesy of ABAN. |
![]() Eric explaining the history and geography of his hometown Kapelle-op-den-Bos, Belgium on June 23, 2015 to members of international asbestos taskforce. Picture courtesy of ABAN. |
![]() Eric speaking to Eternit asbestos victims in Kymore, India (2016) during the making of the award-winning documentary: Breathless. Photograph courtesy of Daniel Lambo. |
![]() From left: UK Mesothelioma survivor Vivienne Swain, Sugio Furuya from the Asian Ban Asbestos Network, Eric Jonckheere from the Belgian Asbestos Victims Group and Jacques Faugeron from the French Association for the Defense of Asbestos Victims, at the International Asbestos Study Day in Manchester, UK on July 5, 2017. |
![]() Photo taken by Eric Jonckheere. Family archive. |
As an airline pilot, Eric had often spoken of the spectacular vistas hed witnessed above the clouds. During our last WhatsApp video call, he gazed at the sunlight streaming through the hospice windows and told me that he himself would soon be going towards the light. We wish you blue skies and following winds, dear friend. After all you have achieved and all you have suffered, you are cleared for takeoff. Fly high, JonckAir 1 and God speed.
To Dorothée, Xavier, Benoît, Charline, Max, Ced and his beloved grandchildren, we send our love, condolences and promises that Eric will remain in our hearts until we join him somewhere high above the plump cumulus clouds that he so loved.
1 Kazan-Allen, L. Historic Victory for Belgian Asbestos Victims. December 7, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-historic-victory-for-belgian-asbestos-victims.php
Kazan-Allen, L. A Man on a Mission. April 22, 2022.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-a-man-on-a-mission.php
Kazan-Allen, L. The Jonckheeres A Belgian Family Under Siege. August 2021.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-the-jonkheeres-a-belgian-family-under-seige.pdf
2 Kazan-Allen, L. Asbestos Victory in Belgium. March 30, 2017.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-asbestos-victory-in-belgium.php
3 Allen, D & Kazan-Allen, L. Editors. Eternit and the Great Asbestos Trial. 2012.
http://ibasecretariat.org/eternit-great-asbestos-trial-toc.htm
Kazan-Allen, L. Japan Eternit: An Unending Story. July 31, 2012.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-japan-eternit-unending-story-2012.php
4 Kazan-Allen, L. Historic Victory for Belgian Asbestos Victims. December 7, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-historic-victory-for-belgian-asbestos-victims.php
Déjà Vu 2024
There is nothing unique about what Kazakh asbestos stakeholders are doing to protect their bottom line. They are following a path well trodden by lobbyists from the UK, Italy, the US, Canada, Belgium, Switzerland, Brazil and elsewhere who devised, tweaked and implemented the playbook for an industry which has caused an unprecedented global epidemic of disease and death. The difference is, however, the context within which they are trying to do it. With 21st century means of communication, the time is long past when purveyors of a group 1 carcinogen can blithely peddle propaganda and pseudoscience designed to convince governments, trade unions and citizens that their asbestos is the exception to the rule and can be used safely under controlled conditions.
Kazakhstan is the worlds second largest asbestos-producer and accounted, on average, for ~17% of annual global output between 2016 and 2022.1 Kazakh citizens, however, are loathe to use products containing this home-grown mineral. Domestic demand for asbestos is low, and Kazakh asbestos usage, according to data from the United States Geological Survey, accounted for only 12% of purchases in the 4-year period ending in 2022. A 2023 article stated that subsequently annual domestic consumption had dwindled to a mere 5%, with the remaining asbestos being exported to Uzbekistan, India, Tajikistan, Sri Lanka, China, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Vietnam, Thailand and Kyrgyzstan.2
In recent years Kazakh asbestos stakeholders have played an increasingly visible role in the global asbestos lobby:
Despite the political and economic power wielded by representatives of Kazakhstans asbestos industry, grassroots opposition to the countrys commercial exploitation of asbestos is growing. People in the town of Zhitikar, in the Kostanay Region of northern Kazakhstan, are mobilizing over the elevated incidence of cancer in the region which is home to the countrys only chrysotile (white) asbestos mining facility. Zhitikar has the fourth highest incidence of cancer in the region. The head of the regional health department, Daniyar Zhandaev, believes that the increase in cancer cases is linked to environmental contamination caused by asbestos mining operations. Local activists are demanding that a comprehensive environmental audit be undertaken and that the region be recognized as an environmental disaster zone. Responding to these concerns, the Ministry of Ecology issued instructions for inspections of the industrial facilities to be caried out.7
As has been seen in asbestos-producing countries the world over, exporting asbestos does not safeguard local populations from experiencing toxic exposures. Asbestos poisons the lives not only of those who mine it but also of those with the misfortune to live in the areas from where it is sourced. Sooner or later, the people in Zhitikar will act on this danger to life. For their sakes, I hope it is sooner.
1 According to the United States Geological Survey between 2016 and 2022, Kazak asbestos production was 1,459,523 tonnes/t; total global output was 8,510,000t. Over the same period, Kazakh domestic consumption was 176,000t, 12% of all production. The vast majority of Kazakh asbestos production was exported.
2 Aulbekova, A. Костанайские карьеры: как добывают асбест на одном из крупнейших месторождений в мире [Kostanay quarries: how asbestos is mined at one of the largest deposits in the world]. January 27, 2023.
https://forbes.kz/articles/hrizotilovyie_gorizontyi_1674785755
В Казахстане открыли первый завод по производству фиброцементных фасадных плит [The first plant for the production of fiber cement facade panels has opened in Kazakhstan]. October 1, 2024.
https://chrysotile.ru/news/v-kazakhstane-otkryli-pervyy-zavod-po-proizvodstvu-fibrotsementnykh-fasadnykh-plit/
3 Здоровье и хризотил: научная конференция в Кыргызстане даст толчок исследованиям минеральных волокон в СНГ [The international scientific and practical conference Modern aspects of occupational hygiene in the use of natural fibrous materials in CIS enterprises has concluded in Bishkek]. October 1, 2024.
https://chrysotile.ru/news/zdorove-i-khrizotil-nauchnaya-konferentsiya-v-kyrgyzstane-dast-tolchok-issledovaniyam-mineralnykh-vo/
4 Kazan-Allen, L. Kazakh Producers Chasing Russian Asbestos Markets. September 6, 2022.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-kazakh-producers-chasing-russian-asbestos-markets.php
5 Kazan-Allen, L. The Fight for Ukraine Sovereignty over its Asbestos Policy. September 20, 2021.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-fight-for-ukraine-sovereignty-over-its-asbestos-policy.php
6 Kazan-Allen, L. Corporate Deceit: Asbestos Espionage at Home and Abroad. March 18, 2019.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-corporate-deceit-asbestos-espionage-at-home-and-abroad.php
7 Экокатастрофа: в Житикаре связали рак с добычей асбеста - обзор казпрессы [Eco-disaster: cancer linked to asbestos mining in Zhitikar]. October 23, 2024.
https://www.caravan.kz/news/jekokatastrofa-v-zhitikare-svjazali-rak-s-dobychej-asbesta-obzor-kazpressy/
Kazan-Allen, L. First International Asbestos Conference in Kazakhstan. May 5, 2009.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka_first_int_asb_conf_kazakhstan.php
Europes Mesothelioma Epidemic A UK Perspective
Data released on September 26, 2024 sourced from the European Occupational Diseases Statistics database and collated under the auspices of Eurostat a directorate of the European Commission confirmed the ongoing mesothelioma epidemic in European Union (EU) Member States. The total number of EU mesothelioma deaths in 2021 was 2,380 with the worst affected countries being: Italy (518), Germany (400) and France (329).1 In 2021, 135 more EU citizens (1,409) were diagnosed with mesothelioma than in 2020 (1,274). Between 2013 and 2021, mesothelioma accounted for approximately 40% of all EU occupational cancers.
Considering the massive historic use of asbestos in Europe and the lack of diagnostic capacity in most member states, the figure of 2,380 undoubtedly underestimated EU mortality from the signature cancer associated with asbestos exposure.2 Commenting on the new data, Giulio Romani of The European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) said:
The rise in the number of working people being diagnosed with mesothelioma must be a wake-up call to the European Commission over their responsibility to continue protecting workers from asbestos... The EUs own data shows that asbestos-related cancer is still a very real to peoples lives today despite the progress that has been made over the last few decades thanks to better safety standards fought for by trade unions. That progress cannot be taken for granted. We know that the renovation wave as part of the EUs Green Deal will increase exposure to asbestos and that puts a responsibility on the EU to ensure that workers carrying out the programme are properly protected.3
As bad as the figures for EU mesothelioma deaths are, things could be a lot worse. Thanks to Brexit, total EU mesothelioma mortality was decreased by 2,290 in 2021. With the worlds worst incidence rate of mesothelioma, the UKs departure from the EU at a stroke slashed the EUs annual mesothelioma death toll. The attacks on health and safety propagated during the 14 years of the Conservative Government (2010-2024) and the continued refusal to address the countrys asbestos crisis will result in many more avoidable UK deaths in the decades to come. Whether the Labour administration will do any better remains to be seen. Watch this space.
1 Mesothelioma cancer: still a relevant occupational disease. September 26, 2024.
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/products-eurostat-news/w/edn-20240926-1
2 European countries, if we include the former Soviet Union, have consumed 100 million tonnes of asbestos since 1920. Let me repeat that figure: 100 million tonnes. This equates to 52% of all the asbestos used during that time.1 If Russia and Asian countries belonging to the former Soviet Union Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are excluded, usage in the remaining European countries totals 44 million tonnes, 23% of global consumption.
Kazan-Allen, L. Conference Report: Europes Asbestos Catastrophe. November 9, 2012.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-bruss-europes-asbestos-catastrophe-report-2012.php
3 ETUC. Workplace cancer spike shows need for asbestos screening directive. September 26, 2024.
https://www.etuc.org/en/pressrelease/workplace-cancer-spike-shows-need-asbestos-screening-directive
Asbestos Hypocrites: Who? Where? How?
For decades, asbestos-producing countries have simultaneously extolled the virtues of the magic mineral and refrained from using it. The duplicitous behaviour, which was first observed in Canada, has also been seen in Russia, Kazakhstan and Brazil. It seems more likely than not that China, the only other asbestos producer still in business, will, in due course, be following suit.
Even as Canadian diplomats and lawyers were arguing their countrys case against the 1997 French asbestos ban at the World Trade Organization (WTO),1 Canada was shipping all the output from its asbestos mines overseas. During the WTOs adjudication of the case, which lasted from 1998 until 2001, Canadian exports outstripped production by almost 8,000 tonnes. The substance which was too toxic to be used in Canada was safe enough to be used in France and other European Union countries, or so the Canadian legal team argued.
According to data from the United States Geological Survey (USGS), for years, the majority of output from Russian and Kazakh asbestos mines has also been sent abroad. Now that Canada has left the field, having itself banned asbestos in 1998, these two countries have been making the case for asbestos at international agencies, regional forums and bilateral discussions. At every such meeting the Russians and Kazakhs rigidly advocate the safe use position, that is, that the consumption of asbestos is harmless under controlled conditions. Of course, this is nonsense as they well know.2
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The asbestos industrys use of strong-arm tactics is well illustrated by the situation in Ukraine, a county which was formerly a big consumer of asbestos. Ukraines political independence (1991), lead to calls for sovereignty over its asbestos policy.3 This was strongly resisted initially by Russian vested interests and latterly by their Kazakh allies, with government representatives including ministers and ambassadors exerting political and economic pressure on Ukrainian counterparts over the 2017 asbestos ban announcement by Ukraines Ministry of Health. According to Ukrainian Deputy Roksolana Pidlasa:
the Kazakh and Russian [asbestos] lobbies opposed the ban for years. It was from these countries according to the Ministry of Health, during 2006-2016 that Ukraine imported 556,000 tons of asbestos: 35.5% and 64.5%, respectively.4
Even as Ukraine was engaged in a bloody battle against the Russian invaders, it threw off its asbestos yoke. Speaking about the ban asbestos legislation enacted in October 2023, Welsh politician Mick Antoniw, himself of Ukrainian descent, said: The fact that this [ban] has been achieved during a time when the country has been at war with Russia makes this accomplishment all the more extraordinary. 5
China has achieved the rare feat of being simultaneously a producer, user, importer and exporter of asbestos, exploiting emerging trade routes to sell asbestos to new markets in Africa and Asia in recent months.6 According to USGS data, between 2012 and 2022, domestic asbestos consumption in China fell almost 40% from 431,000 tonnes/t to 261,000t. Over the same period, production fell more than 60% from 320,000t/year to 130,000t. While these figures may not be entirely accurate, they are reliable enough to indicate a downward trend in both use and production.7
There is no question that the government of China is aware of the asbestos hazard having already taken steps to protect the its citizens as noted below:
Unfortunately, more needs to be done. In 2022, lung cancer which is the predominant disease caused by exposure to asbestos was the most common cancer in China with 1,060,600 cases.8 In May this year (2024) a paper in the Chinese Journal of Epidemiology confirmed that:
the burden of lung cancer incidence and mortality in China is still heavy, especially among the elderly. With the intensification of aging in the future, the disease burden of lung cancer will be further aggravated... actively promoting the implementation of tertiary prevention measures for lung cancer, especially the primary and secondary prevention of lung cancer, may be an effective measure to deal with the current epidemic situation of lung cancer in China.9
It is not unreasonable to postulate that China may, in the not-too distant future, decide to follow the examples set by other asbestos-producing countries Canada, Russia, Kazakhstan and Brazil and decrease asbestos use at home even if it continues to ship the output from its mines abroad.10 While thats not ideal, it would certainly be a step in the right direction. One can but hope that by the time this comes to pass, international agencies, regional bodies and national governments will have adopted asbestos prohibitions, leaving China with few, if any, customers. When that happens, the only viable option will be to shut down the asbestos mines. Now, thats something Id really like to see.
1 Kazan-Allen, L. WTO Asbestos Case. April 28, 2000.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka_wto.php
Kazan-Allen, L. WTO Upholds French Ban on Chrysotile. May 5, 2001.
http://www.ibasecretariat.org/lka_can_wto_appeal_res.php
2 International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS). Asbestos Policies of Major International Agencies. Accessed September 1, 2024.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka_asb_polic_maj_int_agencies.php
3 Kazan-Allen, L. Its Official: Asbestos Use Banned in Ukraine. October 25, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-its-official-asbestos-use-banned-in-ukraine.php
4 This huge consumption figure was verified by data from the United States Geological Survey (USGS), according to which Ukraine consumed 586,253 tonnes of asbestos between 2006 and 2016.
Токсичен и вызывает рак – Рада запретила использование асбеста [Toxic and causes cancer - Rada banned the use of asbestos]. September 7, 2022.
https://vesti.ua/strana/toksichen-i-vyzyvaet-rak-rada-zapretila-ispolzovanie-asbesta
This link was no longer working when checked on September 1, 2024.
5 Kazan-Allen, L. Its Official: Asbestos Use Banned in Ukraine. October 25, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-its-official-asbestos-use-banned-in-ukraine.php
6 Kazan-Allen, L. Russias Asbestos Cash Cow under Threat? August 13, 2024.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-russia-s-asbestos-cash-cow-under-threat.php
IBAS Asbestos News Digest. China articles.
http://ibasecretariat.org/abs_archive_news.php?sel=c&c_val=China
7 Annual asbestos consumption in China over recent years (2018-22) remains substantial at ~250,000t.
8 Han, B., et al. Cancer incidence and mortality in China, 2022. March 2024.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667005424000061#:~:text=Leading%20causes%20of%20new%20cancer,of%20total%20new%20cancer%20cases
9 Guo, L., Lin, C. et al. 中国人群肺癌疾病负担分析 [Analysis of lung cancer burden in Chinese population]. May 13, 2024.
http://chinaepi.icdc.cn/zhlxbx/article/html/20240502
10 被60多国禁用的一级“致癌物”,1Kg含百万根尖针!为何我国随处可见 [A first-class carcinogen banned by more than 60 countries, 1kg contains millions of sharp needles! Why can it be seen everywhere in China?] April 9, 2024.
https://new.qq.com/rain/a/20240409A0628P00
癌症较容易找上男性!医生揭4大原因 [Cancer is more likely to strike men! Doctors reveal 4 reasons]. August 18, 2024.
https://news.seehua.com/post/1200854
Guo, L., Lin, C. et al. 中国人群肺癌疾病负担分析 [Analysis of lung cancer burden in Chinese population]. May 13, 2024.
http://chinaepi.icdc.cn/zhlxbx/article/html/20240502
UK J&J Summer 2024 Audit
Thirteen months after my last impromptu toxic talc audit, I ventured into retail outlets in the London suburb where I live to ascertain whether Johnson & Johnsons (J&J) talc-based baby powder was still being sold, despite the companys assurances that the product had been withdrawn from global markets. When I last did a spot check on July 16, 2023, I found it on the shelves of a branch of Sainsburys, the UKs second largest chain of supermarkets, and at Savers, a UK chain of 500 health and beauty shops.1
On August 18, 2024, however, the situation had changed completely and no talc-based J&J baby powder was available in either shop. In its place were cans of J&J cornstarch-based baby powder which, as we know, is a safer option as it does not contain asbestos fibers.
![]() A few containers of J&J cornstarch-based baby powder available on Sunday, August 18, 2024 at Sainsburys. |
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| Only one container of J&J cornstarch-based baby powder available on Sunday, August 18, 2024 at Savers. | |
Checking online, I only found the cornstarch powder on sale at Tescos, Waitrose and Boots. Unfortunately, however, a multipack of two cans of the talc-based J&J baby powder was still available from Amazon.2 The product description left no doubt as to the toxic contents: Johnsons Baby Talcum Powder Multipack of 2 Clinically Proven Talc for Newborn Delicate Skin Leaves Skin Soft and Smooth 2 x 200g.
![]() J&J talc-based baby powder on sale on Amazon August 18, 2024. |
If J&J cannot stop retailers from selling their discredited and potentially hazardous product, the government must step in to protect consumers.
1 Kazan-Allen, L. From Consumer Icon to Grim Reaper: The Sorry Tale of J&J Baby Powder. July 17, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-blogzxa210.php
2 Johnsons Baby Talcum Powder Multipack of 2 available from Amazon on August 18, 2024.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Johnsons-Multipack-Clinically-Newborn-Delicate/dp/B083MWWC6J/ref=asc_df_B083MWWC6J/
Remembering Takao Migita and Eiji Kurita
Present day life is lived at great speed. Twenty-four-hour news cycles mean that what was reported today will be history tomorrow. Matters of life and death, famine and deprivation, scandal and gossip chase each other on news portals before disappearing down a black hole into oblivion. On August 1, 2024 World Lung Cancer Day lets press the pause button and pay tribute to the injured, people caught up in a fight not of their making, and those who brought them solace, compassion and support.
A few weeks ago, a one-hour documentary was broadcast on Kansai TV honoring the memory of Takao Migita, a Japanese mesothelioma sufferer who worked ceaselessly to support others similarly afflicted.1 From the time he was diagnosed in 2016, until his premature death aged 59 in March 2024, Takao reached out to people marginalized by asbestos illnesses all over Japan individually, collectively and nationally. He was a jovial figure with the capacity to bring humor into the darkest moments. He made his fellow sufferers laugh and would tell them: Ill stay healthy until I die. He paid a terrible price for his dedication losing friend after friend as each mesothelioma sufferer succumbed to his/her illness.
![]() Takao Migita speaking at a meeting with Japanese Ministry officials on June 1, 2018; Eiji Kurita is sitting on his right. Photographer Sugio Furuya. |
Mesothelioma sufferer Eiji Kurita who, is pictured in the photograph above, worked closely with Takao. Eiji was diagnosed with mesothelioma at the age of 33. In 2017, he and Takao founded the Mesothelioma Support Caravan and served as the associations co-chairs. Eiji died in 2019, nearly 20 years after he had been diagnosed.
After Eijis death, Takao and the Caravans members rededicated themselves to its work at an online ceremony on April 25, 2021 attended by scores of patients, families and doctors. Up until his death earlier this year, Takao remained available to members of the organization and to newly affected patients at any time by phone, via video calls and when possible at in-person meetings. The emotional toll he paid for his friendship with Caravan members was immense.
Over the last 25 years, I have been privileged to witness and interact with some amazing human beings. People whose lives have been dedicated to improving conditions endured by men and women who contract avoidable and deadly asbestos-related diseases. Some, I knew well, others I only knew by reputation. All of them deserve to be remembered for the selfless work they did to support the individuals and families whose lives had been stolen by ruthless asbestos profiteers.
1 アスベスト原因・希少がん「中皮腫」と闘った“人生の最期”を記録、カンテレでドキュメンタリー放送。[A documentary broadcast on KTV records the "final days of life" of a man who fought against asbestos-related rare cancer mesothelioma]. June 18, 2024.
https://www.hokkoku.co.jp/articles/-/1443446 [Not available August 1 accessed July 25, 2024.]
アスベスト健康被害の支援の遺志継ぐ、亡き鎌ケ谷の男性 [Late Kamagaya mans continuous efforts to support [those with] asbestos health damage]. May 12, 2021.
https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASP5C74C9P5CUDCB003.html
惜別・右田孝雄さん「笑いと奮闘 苦しみに寄り添い」朝日新聞に掲載されました [Farewell to Takao Migita Laughter and struggle, empathy for those in pain featured in the Asahi Shimbun]. May 22, 2024.
https://asbestos.or.jp/archives/5260
India Transitioning to Asbestos-Free Technology
Sometimes the information youve been looking for crops up in the unlikeliest of places. This is what happened a week ago when I came across a jargon-filled posting on the website of the Financial Express, an English-language Indian business newspaper. The author spoke of PBIT margins, a CAGR of 3.1 per cent, nominal gross value-added (GVA) and the ICRA. As the first three sentences of the text spiked my interest In FY2023, fibre [asbestos] prices had increased by 25 per cent, amidst the RussiaUkraine conflict. Russia is the largest exporter of Chrysotile asbestos in the world. Additionally, rupee depreciation and spiking freight costs due to logistical challenges had worsened the price increase I persisted.1
Having deciphered the abbreviations thank you google I finally got to the bottom of the article where the really good stuff was:
While the country [India] still permits the import of chrysotile asbestos, many countries have banned all types of asbestos. With this ban on the mining of asbestos across countries may lead to non-availability of raw materials, which can ultimately impact the companies operations.
The market share of the top five companies (in revenue terms) in the asbestos fibre cement (FC) sheet segment is in the range of 80-82 per cent, implying an oligopoly market structure Considering the moderate growth prospects of the asbestos FC industry, there are no major capex [capital expenditure] plans in the pipeline for the top five players in the medium term... The key players are moving towards de-risking their business profiles by entering non-asbestos segments due to regulatory risks associated with the threat of a ban on the usage of these products and on the mining of asbestos in the producing countries.
India is the worlds biggest asbestos importer. Traditionally, Russia has been the asbestos supplier of choice for Indian importers; however, since the instability caused by the invasion of Ukraine Russia has been replaced by Brazil as the number one asbestos exporter to India.2 On August 14, 2024, the Brazilian Supreme Court will rule on the unconstitutionality of allowing asbestos, a substance banned in Brazil, to be mined and exported.3 If things turn out the way we hope India may, in the short-term, be looking for a new source of asbestos.
![]() Asbestos-cement products and off-cuts are widely used for roofing in India. Photograph reproduced with the permission of Hein du Plessis. |
In the medium to long term lets hope that the trend identified above becomes a reality and that Indian building product manufacturers make the leap to healthier technologies that are not reliant on the use of carcinogens.
1 Asbestos-based roofing players PBIT margins likely at 8-9% in FY25 and FY26, margins to slide in FY22-24 on Russia-Ukraine conflict, supply chain disruptions. June 26, 2024.
https://www.financialexpress.com/business/industry-asbestos-based-roofing-players-pbit-margins-likely-at-8-9-in-fy25-and-fy26-margins-to-slide-in-fy22-24-on-russia-ukraine-conflict-supply-chain-disruptions-3535281/
2 Kazan-Allen, L. Russians Losing Key Asbestos Market. June 5, 2024.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-russians-losing-key-asbestos-market.php
Kazan-Allen, L. Global Asbestos Trade 2023: Spotlight on India. September 28, 2023.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka-global-asbestos-trade%202023-spotlight-on-india.php
3 NÚMERO ÚNICO: 0026228-59.2019.1.00.0000 [UNIQUE NUMBER: 0026228-59.2019.1.00.0000]. AÇÃO DIRETA DE INCONSTITUCIONALIDADE [DIRECT ACTION FOR UNCONSTITUTIONALITY]
https://portal.stf.jus.br/processos/detalhe.asp?incidente=5738022
Brazilian Supreme Court Calendar. Accessed July 4, 2024.
https://portal.stf.jus.br/pauta/pesquisarCalendario.asp
Canada, Time to Choose Sides!
Once upon a time, you could easily put a face to the crime. Asbestos pushers from Canada would show themselves at public forums like clockwork theyd even smile for the camera. Nothing to see here folks, please move on.
![]() Canadian delegation at 2006 Geneva meeting of the UNs Rotterdam Convention where they declared Canada does not support the listing of chrysotile asbestos. |
The Canadian diplomats, businessmen and scientists tasked with promoting and protecting the asbestos brand were delegates at international meetings, witnesses at judicial and legislative hearings and members of staff at Canadian embassies around the world. 1
That was then. In 2018 Canada, like most other developed countries, banned asbestos. All asbestos mining operations ceased and the use and export of asbestos fiber became illegal. Score one for the good guys.
Canada, however, remains complicit in the global asbestos epidemic not only because of the millions of tonnes of Canadian asbestos already incorporated within the built environment2 but also because of the countrys tacit support for the asbestos lobby.
The mouthpiece for global asbestos vested interests is the International Chrysotile Association (ICA); it is on the Quebec business registry (number 1147070081) with the address: 3900-1 Place Ville-Marie, Montreal.3 This is the same address provided to the Secretariat of the UN Rotterdam Convention (RC) by ICA directors and officials registered to attend the 2023 Conference of the Parties to the RC, none of whom appear to be resident in Canada. ICA personnel using this address were:
As well as sharing the same address in Canada which turns out to belong to Dentons, the worlds largest global law firm 5 all those named above had the same phone number which, according to the area code, is located in Belgium, where the public relations company hired by the ICA Alonso Associates is based.6 The phone number listed on the PR firms website is the same as that listed by the ICA personnel: 32 2 230 70 42.
The fact that provincial and federal authorities remain willing to aid and abet former allies, despite the sea-change in Canadas asbestos policy, is disturbing. If asbestos is too dangerous to be used in Canada, why is the ICA a completely foreign-funded pro-asbestos lobbying organization deemed to be a legitimate enterprise when its declared aim is the promotion of a class 1 carcinogen? 7 Assisting a murderer is a crime; so too is providing sanctuary for those who promote death and destruction. Quantifying and addressing Canadas lethal role in the global asbestos epidemic will take time but the very least that should be done is for the ICA to be struck off the Quebec business registry. The time is long past due.
1 Kazan-Allen, L. Rotterdam Treaty Killed by Chrysotile Asbestos! October 17, 2006.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka_rott_meet_geneva_oct_06.php
2 Between 1900 and 2000, mines in Québec, Newfoundland, British Columbia and the Yukon produced a total of 61 million tons of chrysotile (white asbestos); most of it was exported.
Kazan-Allen, L. Canadian Asbestos: A Global Concern. October 2003.
http://ibasecretariat.org/lka_ottawa_conf_rep_03_plus.php
3 Quebec Registry. Accessed June 8, 2024.
https://www.registreentreprises.gouv.qc.ca/RQAnonymeGR/GR/GR03/GR03A2_19A_PIU_RechEnt_PC/PageResultat.aspx?T1.JetonStatic=7a5331fd-2cb8-4b49-9a3e-d4dfb8d007bd&T1.CodeService=S00436#CPH_K1ZoneContenu1_Cadr_
IdSectionResultat_IdSectionResultat_K1DetailsRecherche_Ancre
For more on the ICA, see: Ruff, K. Exposé of the International Chrysotile Association. February 18. 2013.
https://rightoncanada.ca/?p=1862
Ruff, K. How Canada Changed from Exporting Asbestos to Banning Asbestos: The Challenges That Had to Be Overcome. October 2017.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5664636/
4 As of 2020, Emiliano Alonso was also President of the ICA.
Letter to Emiliano Alonso. November 27, 2020.
http://www.ibasecretariat.org/letter-to-president-international-chrysotile-association.pdf
5 Website of Dentons Law. Accessed June 10, 2024.
https://www.dentons.com/en/
6 Website of Alonso Associates. Accessed June 10, 2024.
https://www.alonsoassociates.com/
7 Thibodeau, M. Interdiction de Lamiante au Canada. Le Croisé du Chrysotile [Asbestos Ban in Canada. The Chrysotile Crusader]. December 16, 2016.
https://plus.lapresse.ca/screens/d292ae80-1b67-4e20-b779-b354fec8a85b%7C_0.html
Two Countries, Two Different Approaches to the Asbestos Hazard
The unwelcomed discovery of asbestos-contaminated mulch in public spaces in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and Canberra, combined with an almost laser-like focus on the deadly repercussions of exposures to engineered stone building products, seem to have reenergized the Australian debate on avoidable dangers at the workplace, in the home and in the environment. As a result, in December, 2023 the Australian federal government announced that as of July 1, 2024 the use of engineered stone would be banned nationwide; Australia is the first country in the world to outlaw this material. 1
On May 9, 2024, a joint statement on asbestos was issued by Australian trade unions, asbestos victims groups, research institutions and campaigning bodies calling on the Government to prioritize the removal of 6.2 million tonnes of asbestos from Australian workplaces, public buildings and homes, in order to save 28,000+ lives. Every year, 4,000 Australians die from asbestos-related diseases.2
A petition entitled Eradicate Asbestos was categorical about the threat asbestos still posed to Australians despite the fact that it was banned over two decades ago:
There is simply no safe level of asbestos. Modelling shows us that if we are to meander along at the same rate of removal, we will still have more than 1 million tonnes in the built environment in the year 2060 and that by the end of the century, 100 years since the ban, we still will have failed to remove all asbestos containing materials. The asbestos in our built environment can be up to sixty years old and is degrading. This is really dangerous. We need asbestos gone now.3
In contrast to the proactive stance in Australia is the approach in the UK, where the discovery of another hazard in asbestos-contaminated buildings has generated a totally different response. The 2023/24 scandal over the presence of deteriorating reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) in UK schools and the national disgrace of asbestos contamination of the educational infrastructure resulted in the traditional British reaction in the face of seemingly overwhelming obstacles. After much media coverage and dozens of political promises, some structural engineers are now saying what the Government wants to hear: We will have to learn to live with Raac as weve lived with asbestos 4
This week the conclusions of the five-year public inquiry into the UKs contaminated blood scandal were published. Multiple causes for the dangerous treatments given to haemophiliacs and others from the 1970s to early 1990s were cited and blame was laid at the door of successive government as well as the NHS. There was denial, obfuscation and a massive cover-up which prioritized financial and reputational considerations. As a result, 3,000 people have died and tens of thousands have been infected by toxic blood transfusions or the use of tainted imported blood plasma products.5
Will it take another fifty years for the UK government to get to grips with the ongoing crisis of deteriorating asbestos not only in our schools but also in other public buildings? How many more people will die before the callous and dangerous position of the Health and Safety Executive and Government changes?
1 Kolovus, B. Australia will become the first country to ban engineered stone bench tops. Will others follow? December 14, 2024.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/dec/14/australia-will-become-the-first-county-to-ban-engineered-stone-bench-tops-will-others-follow
2 Joint statement. Leading health experts, unions and asbestos victims back national roadmap to remove 6.2m tonnes of asbestos from Australian workplaces, public buildings and homes that will save more than 28,000 lives. May 9, 2024.
https://www.australianunions.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Joint-statement-on-Asbestos-National-Strategic-Plan-9-May-2024.pdf
3 Eradicate Asbestos. Accessed May 20, 2024.
https://www.australianunions.org.au/campaigns/sign-the-petition-to-eradicate-asbestos/
4 Johnson, T. We will have to learn to live with Raac as weve lived with asbestos, say structural engineers. May 14, 2024.
https://www.newcivilengineer.com/latest/we-will-have-to-learn-to-live-with-raac-as-weve-lived-with-asbestos-say-structural-engineers-14-05-2024/
5 Siddique, H., Hall, R. UK infected blood scandal made worse by chilling cover-up, inquiry finds. May 20, 2024.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/article/2024/may/20/infected-blood-scandal-cover-up-inquiry-concludes?CMP=share_btn_url
Turning Swords into Ploughshares
In the aftermath of this years World Earth Day (April 22), several Chinese articles were uploaded detailing the ecological restoration of polluted mining sites located in or near the Giant Panda National Park in the Yaan Area of Chinas Sichuan Province. Amongst the abandoned areas on the 5,936 square kilometer section of the nature preserve which were earmarked for reclamation pursuant to The Ecological Restoration Demonstration Project of Historical Abandoned Mines in the Giant Panda National Park were six derelict asbestos mines, the presence of which posed a threat to the health of people and wild animals.1 Additional sub-projects involved remediation work at marble and other mines.
The removal of a large amount of asbestos waste, which was causing landscape damage, serious soil erosion, encroachment on giant panda habitats, and vegetation destruction at the Sichuan Xinkang Asbestos Mine in Huilong Town began in 2022; a variety of measures were used for the restoration work, including slope shaping, soil covering, and grass planting. By April 19, 2024, it was reported that the formerly toxic site had been completely greened, and the grass was verdant and full of life under the sun.2
According to Li Tianhu, deputy director of the Shimian County Natural Resources and Planning Bureau:
The implementation of the project has increased the area of suitable habitat for the giant panda, improved the capacity of water conservation and soil and water conservation, improved the ecological environment of the surrounding areas, and improved the ecological environment of the transition zone between the Giant Panda National Park and the human settlement area, so as to better promote the symbiosis and co-protection between man and nature. 3
More work remains to be done.
For decades, China has been one of the worlds largest asbestos producers and consumers. However, between 1997 (437,000 tonnes/t) and 2017 (125,000t), Chinas output of chrysotile (white) asbestos the only type of asbestos mined in China fell by over 70%.4 Mines that once produced asbestos fell idle and were abandoned.
From the articles circulated on World Earth Day, it seems that serious work is being done to address the toxic legacy left by the presence of redundant asbestos mines in Sichuan Province. The transformation of scarred landscapes into habitats suitable for Giant Pandas and other animals is amazing in both its scale and vision. Of course, the devil is in the detail but in the absence of any contraindications, it seems that the government of Sichuan home to the countrys only county named after a stone: Asbestos5 is now making the natural environment, biodiversity, and the improvement of living conditions for wildlife and humans a serious priority. Long may it continue.
1 廢棄礦山生態修復成效顯著,國家公園重新綠化“重生” [The ecological restoration of abandoned mines has achieved remarkable results, and the national park has been regreened and "reborn" to life]. April 24, 2024. Accessed April 24, 2024; no longer available April 25, 2024.
http://news.cnwest.com/tianxia/a/2024/04/24/22548188.htm
四川雅安废弃矿山生态修复见闻 [Ecological restoration of abandoned mines in Ya'an, Sichuan]. April 25, 2024.
https://finance.sina.com.cn/money/future/wemedia/2024-04-25/doc-inaszaua7001718.shtml
四川雅安:矿山复绿 守护大熊猫家园 [Ya'an, Sichuan: Mine regreening to protect the giant panda home]. April 23, 2024.
https://difang.gmw.cn/2024-04/23/content_37280346.htm
昔日疤痕累累 如今焕发新颜—四川雅安废弃矿山生态修复见闻 [Scarred in the past, now it has a new look the ecological restoration of abandoned mines in Yaan, Sichuan]. April 24, 2024.
https://www.findzd.com/industry/153741.html
2一线探访|推进大熊猫国家公园建设,石棉生态修复项目“加速度” [Front-line visits. Promote the construction of the Giant Panda National Park and accelerate the asbestos ecological restoration project]. March 17, 2023.
https://cbgc.scol.com.cn/news/4063005
3 寫在人民心裡的“綠色答卷 [The green answer sheet written in the hearts of the people]. April 22, 2024.
http://sc.people.com.cn/BIG5/n2/2024/0328/c345167-40791617.html
4 United States Geological Survey. Asbestos Data. Accessed April 22, 2024.
https://www.usgs.gov/centers/national-minerals-information-center/asbestos-statistics-and-information
5 The name in Chinese [石棉县] is transliterated as Shimian County; it means Asbestos County.
四川石棉:一个老工业县的新“石”代 [Sichuan asbestos: a new stone era in an old industrial county]. January 28, 2021.
https://m.thepaper.cn/baijiahao_10979860
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