Saying no to Canada’s asbestos – National Post Editorial (July 27, 2012)

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Last month, the Quebec government revealed it would lend $58-million to the Jeffrey Mine, the country’s last operating asbestos mine. At the time, mine officials said the money would be enough to keep it operating for 20 years, and we condemned Quebec premier Jean Charest’s decision to essentially provide mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for a “carcinogenic corporate cadaver.” (The Jeffrey Mine already had closed when the province stepped in with the funds, and was unlikely to have reopened without the government’s intervention.)

Our objection, which is echoed by critics as varied as the New Democratic Party and the Canadian Cancer Society, was based on the fact that nearly all the mine’s clients are developing countries where the prospects of asbestos being used safely are remote. Thailand, India and China represent the core of the mine’s business and funding. Selling them a substance that we Canadians find too dangerous for our own use isn’t illegal, but it is ethically problematic, and thereby harms Canada’s reputation on the world stage.

But now it appears that Thai authorities are actively trying to ban chrysotile asbestos imports within the next few months. In January 2011, Thailand’s National Economic and Social Advisory Council recommended banning imports and sales of asbestos in Thailand due to its link to health problems, including cancer. A month later, Thai authorities adopted a resolution in furtherance of that goal. The package of measures proposed therein will be presented to Thai lawmakers this September.Oran Vanich, a major roof-tile manufacturer based in Thailand, which invested $14-million in the Jeffrey mine, has publicly questioned the danger of asbestos in the past. In August 2011, Oran Vanich’s CEO, Kriewsakul Uran, declared that the roof tiles being manufactured with asbestos in Thailand “pose no health risk.” During a public forum on the subject two weeks ago, he added: “Only 55 of 194 member states of the World Health Organization have stopped the use and so far it has not been proved that asbestos causes death. If Thailand ends it, that will be tantamount to executing the innocent.”

Despite the hysterical rhetoric, Thai authorities seem adamant about pursuing the ban. Key international health associations, including the World Federation of Public Health Associations, the International Commission on Occupational Health and the World Bank, have gone on record about the risks posed by asbestos. The World Health Organization says all types of asbestos “cause asbestosis, mesothelioma and lung cancer,” and that there is no safe threshold of exposure.

The question for Canadians becomes this: With even developing nations speaking out about the health risks of asbestos, how can the Charest government defend its decision to artificially prop up an industry that has reached – and surpassed – its natural demand-driven commercial lifespan?

For the rest of this editorial, please go to the National Post website: http://www.financialpost.com/todays-paper/Saying+Canada+asbestos/6997685/story.html