The
health impacts of environmental pollutants are notoriously difficult
to assess, particularly when a mixture of pollutants are involved.
Because of the uncertainties and interests involved, legal requirements
and standards have sometimes failed to protect public health from
industrial pollutants and this is why it is not enough for companies
to merely comply with the law. Rather they need to take a precautionary
approach which aims to continually minimise pollutants.
The
leukaemia cluster in the vicinity of Port Kembla, south of Sydney
illustrates the type of health problems that can arise and the complexity
of determining their cause. An official investigation, carried out
by the Illawarra Area Health Service, identified 13 people resident
in the area, under the age of 50 years, had been diagnosed with
leukaemia, a form of cancer, between 1989 and 1996. (Six of these
people have died.) This rate of diagnosis is 3 or 4 times the average
rates in the rest of the region. Of even more concern is the high
number of young people involved. In the age group 15-24, the incidence
of leukemia was "more than 10 times higher than expected. The probability
of observing at least this excess, due to chance alone, is 0.00012
(1 in 8,333)."
The
investigation noted that benzene is "the only known leukaemogen
with significant local environmental sources." Although residential
exposure to benzene has not been proven to cause leukaemia, occupational
benzene exposure is an internationally recognised cause of leukemia.
The neighbourhood in question is a heavy industrial area with more
than its share of industrial pollution. A key industry and major
employer in the area is the BHP steelworks. The school where three
students and a teacher were diagnosed with leukemia is downwind
of the steel works and in particular the coke production area was
identified as the main industrial source of benzene.
There
were no legal requirements for BHP to monitor its benzene emissions
till a 7.30 Report researcher asked to see a copy of BHPÕs pollution
licence in 1996. Since the levels of benzene being emitted from
the steelworks had not been monitored before the leukemia cluster
was identified the investigation had to rely on BHP estimates of
what they had discharged between 1970 and 1996. Given BHPÕs estimates,
the investigation concluded that the amount of benzene in the air
was not enough to cause the leukaemia cluster and therefore "with
the available information it is not possible to ascribe the cluster
to any particular exposure(s)."
However
it seems that the synergistic effects of chemical pollution in the
area were not investigated, particularly the combination of benzene
as a known carcinogen with other chemicals that depress the immune
system. Dioxin is one such chemical that weakens the immune system
at low levels of exposure. According to the US EPAs recent landmark
dioxin risk assessment, background levels of dioxin are causing
"decreased sperm count in men, higher probability of endometriosis
in women, weakened immune systems, and other health problems" in
the American population. Dioxin is also thought to be a cancer promoter,
promoting cancers initiated by other chemicals.
The
Illawarra Area Health Service investigation noted that the steelworks
"are known to be significant sources of dioxins." BHP's annual report
shows that it emits the equivalent of 20g of TCDD, the most toxic
of the dioxins, per year. Whilst this may not sound like much the
US EPA estimates that dioxin emissions in the whole of the USA totalled
3kg of TCDD equivalents in 1995. The World Health Organisation has
recommended a "tolerable daily intake" of dioxin of between 1 and
4 picograms per kilogram of body weight per day, that is 26-100x10-9g
per year for a 70kg adult.
BHP
may not have breached any legal requirements in its emissions of
benzene and dioxin but this is little comfort to people living in
the vicinity of its Port Kembla steelworks. If engineers want to
protect people living around industrial facilities they cannot wait
till the effects of industrial pollutants are known for certain,
nor assume that legal requirements are sufficient to protect public
health. Rather they need to take a precautionary approach that seeks
to continually reduce emissions.
...back to top
Source:
Sharon
Beder, 'Precaution needed beyond legal requirements', Engineers
Australia, March 1999, p. 60.
Additional
References:
Victoria
J Westley-Wise et al, Investigation
of a cluster of leukaemia in the Illawarra region of New South Wales,
1989-1996, Medical Journal of Australia 171, 1999, pp. 178-18.
The
findings of the workers inquiry, The
truth behind the Wollongong leukemia crisis, International
Workers Bulletin, September 22, 1997.
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