Patrice Riemens on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 15:25:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Solid (and E-) waste blues in Brazil |
>From the Bricolabs list/ Jaromil/ Felipe Fonseca: re all, some interesting news appeared today on a popular geek's forum: (from the got-enough-of-our-own-thanks dept.) Peace Corps Online writes: "BBC reports that Brazilian authorities are demanding the return of more than 1,400 tons of hazardous British waste found in about 90 shipping containers on three Brazilian docks. The waste, which includes syringes, condoms, and bags of blood, has been identified as being of UK origin from the names of British supermarkets and newspapers among the rubbish. Reports in the UK media say the waste was sent from Felixstowe in eastern England to the port of Santos, near Sao Paulo, and two other ports in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. The British government has launched an investigation into how and why the waste was sent to Brazil and the British Embassy in Brazil has said in a statement that it was investigating and would 'not hesitate to act' if it was found that a UK company had violated the Basel Convention on the movement of hazardous waste. Meanwhile Brazil is demanding the immediate return of the rubbish to the UK. 'We will ask for the repatriation of this garbage,' says Roberto Messias, head of the Brazilian environment agency. 'Clearly, Brazil is not a big rubbish dump of the world.'" Two UK companies named by Brazil as suspected exporters of the waste are owned by a Brazilian, based in the UK, who says that anything that was in the containers other than the expected recyclable plastic is a problem to take up with his suppliers. http://news.slashdot.org/story/09/07/18/208226/Brazil-Demands-Repatriation-of-UK-Hazardous-Waste (>> http://tinyurl.com/nbjwbp) i find this news extremely interesting. not because this is actually happening, nor because we can now start a war on those companies or some blaming sessions back and forth between North and South. i find it interesting because for the first time something like that is acknowledged widely and even discussed on a geek's forum. now this is not just UK dumping stuff in Brasil, simple as it sounds: that is just the tip of an iceberg, which might be melting soon. imagine the quantity of "hazardous waste" shipped by Europe to the even-closer Africa, we all know that at least on paper. i can imagine it very well, i can actually smell it, as i smelled it for all my childhood in the outskirts of the city where i was born, playing with a wooden stick and that strange little lake of bubbling green thing smelling so acid, so funny to find it on that little beach far away where i used to go to be alone. the south of Italy in fact lives an analogue situation with the trash (remember Napoli last year?) where the most pathetic aspect it is actually that in the south are the most beautiful places of our rotting nation. so is there a pattern somewhere here? i can't believe this is just about some criminals at the guide of our industrialized sado/maso societies. then this all means we are very (very!) stupid. are we starting to rationalize all this (ALL, not just UK and Brazil please)? are we able to track all the variables at stake? so here i conclude with an exhortation, lets tell it to our friends and let it propagate widely: if you really want to tag something with an RFID, stop worrying about poor people shoplifting and start from the trash of the rich! ciao - -- jaromil, dyne.org developer, http://jaromil.dyne.org Felipe Fonseca's reply: jaromil escreveu: > so is there a pattern somewhere here? i can't believe this is just > about some criminals at the guide of our industrialized sado/maso > societies. then this all means we are very (very!) stupid. from our perspective, the possibility of the UK company being also owned by a Brasilian sounds awfully familiar. I would say, it was almost expected. > are we starting to rationalize all this (ALL, not just UK and Brazil > please)? are we able to track all the variables at stake? no way. I know all kinds of garbage, and in particular e-waste, are regularly delivered to different parts of the world. I don't have enough information about that, but it seems likely that the situation in Ghana, Nigeria, India and China is at least similar, or even worse than the brasilian. So, allow me to explain that a little bit... Brasil has no regulation regarding 'solid waste'. There is a proposed legislation - encompassing different kinds of materials - that started being developed in 1991! Please everyone, try to rememeber what the world was like in 1991. I was 13, Fernando Collor - the playboy - was the soon to be impeached president, Brasil had been football champion only three times. The Rio'92 ecology conference was still being planned. The inflation in Brasil amounted to two digits a month. What else? I was beginning to learn to play the guitar, was in love with a girl three years older - and had kissed her once. Well, 1991. The idea for the sold waste legislation was first developed that year, and started to be processed by brasilian congress. Now cut to 2009. The 1991 project is a pretty piece of code, receiving cumpliments in the whole world. But it wasn't approved yet. Me and some other people are following it with a focus on e-waste, and documenting it all in a weblog - http://lixoeletronico.org. After all these years developing metareciclagem, we learned the single biggest problem every grassroots computer reuse/recycling lab has is, after a while, accumulating a great deal of material that can not be used in any way. And there's no alternative for it: either we earn a couple bucks selling it to evil companies that will shread the materials and send it to China, Ghana, Nigeria, India or the like; or we find one of the two or three trustworthy recycling companies in Brasil - and PAY for the material to be processed. Then, a couple of weeks ago we heard the legislation was moving. The weird news was: everything related to electronic waste was removed from the project by a kind of anonymous working group. Everything. If approved, that new law would skip all the possible accountability for electronics in Brasil. In a country that has an estimated 60 million PCs and 160 million mobile phones being used, that is a major lack of responsibility. We published an online manifesto, http://lixoeletronico.org/manifesto, and started asked people to sign a petition asking the congressmen to put electronics back into the legislation. There are not much more than 600 people signing it now, but some key people are there. It is available here, if any of you care to sign it: http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?ewaste1 After less than a week, we have got a reasonable amount of response from both the onlinosphere, some parts of the big media and, best of all, a couple congressmen who were part of that working group, wanted to include electronics, but were not able to show any kind of public support for their position. They thanked us for making all the noise and making the discussion public. The way it was conducted before our movement, the discussion would circle between the industry lobbies and the congressmen. Now we brought it to public, and hopefully will be able to make it a big issue in the media (something I have always avoided up to this moment, but now it is needed) in orded to influence that process. Now, getting back to the thread... both things - the fact that a 18-year old piece of legislation disappears during the night, and a brasilian-owned UK company sending illegal garbage to a brasilian company because they make a lot of money and couldn't care less for the environmental, economic and social consequences of all that, seem very similar. Different parts of a giant puzzle that is essentially against life, against the environment, againts everything we stand for. I do agree with you, Jaromil. It is great to see that discussed in a geek forum. It is great to see that kind of information - about things that have always happened, and sadly still happen a lot - finally reaching the public domain, and hopefully influencing the way things are done. But we must be aware that, as we change the game, the strategies of those in power will also change. The old ways of fighting need to be reinvented. It isn't easy to keep a wide perspective on it all, as the whole thing is ever more diffuse. But we're still on it. > so here i conclude with an exhortation, lets tell it to our friends > and let it propagate widely: > > if you really want to tag something with an RFID, stop worrying about > poor people shoplifting and start from the trash of the rich! Here from inside the land of contrast I would say: not only the rich. The 'new middle class' is becoming full of crap, literally. I have seen both rich and poor people trying to produce less waste, but I have seen both rich and poor people dumping their garbage from inside moving vehicles. But anyway, agreed on tagging trash, not products (an unacknowledged amount of shoplifters I know are middle-class youngsters looking for cheap fun, and poorer people are usually more afraid of doing such things because they would suffer more if caught once). 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