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International-UN-NGOs
U.N. Experts Plan Attack on Toxic PCBs
2004-06-11
Right after they solve global warming and whirled peas.
Dozens of experts armed with a new global treaty began Thursday to plan a decades-long assault on PCBs, one of the most widespread and difficult to eradicate chemical pollutants. Billions of dollars will be spent globally "to make the world PCB-free by the year 2028" under the treaty that went into force last month, said James B. Willis, director of the chemicals unit at the U.N. Environment Program. Production of the chemicals is banned, but they are still in use in a wide array of electrical equipment, it said. Replacing the equipment and removing the pollution from the environment will take years. The most common way of disposing of them is through high-temperature incinerators, which are expensive to run, officials said. Other methods also are being developed.

PCBs are among "the most widespread of all environmental pollutants, found worldwide in air, water, soil, food and the fatty tissues of humans and animals," the agency said. They maybe, perhaps, might, could can cause health problems, including weakened immunity, and maybe, quite possibly cancer, it added. PCBs are one of several toxic chemicals covered by the treaty known as the Stockholm Convention that went into force May 17. The list of pollutants also includes DDT, dioxin and pesticides. Some 65 countries have already ratified the accord, and about 100 more have signed it. The United States is among the signers, but the Senate has yet to ratify the treaty even though President Bush has given it his strong backing.
Lookeedat: GWB learned something from Bill Clinton.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Think the UN can beat the PCB's? Or will they negotiate a settlement with them?
Posted by: tu3031   2004-06-11 6:35:31 PM  

#4  Dozens of experts armed with a new global treaty began Thursday to plan a decades-long assault on PCBs, one of the most widespread and difficult to eradicate chemical pollutants. Billions of dollars will be spent globally "to make the world PCB-free by the year 2028" under the treaty that went into force last month, said James B. Willis, director of the chemicals unit at the U.N. Environment Program.

Sounds like a corporation made one of their protection money payments to Kofi Inc. late.
Posted by: badanov   2004-06-11 7:59:18 AM  

#3  I pour PCBs over my asbestos pancakes every morning. Yummy.
Posted by: SteveYao   2004-06-11 6:45:03 AM  

#2  The killer PCB's?
Posted by: mojo   2004-06-11 3:26:58 AM  

#1  This is a natural for the UN. Worldwide ban for years (1977 in the USA) so there will be hardly any left in use. The UN can spend a few billions, do their usual indescernable from nothing, and claim success. Removing it from teh environment is a joke. We have no choice except to wait for natural decay.

Also note this particularly weasily example of journalism - but they are still in use in a wide array of electrical equipment,. The casual reader would take this to mean PCBs are still in widesread use, which they are not.
Posted by: Phil B   2004-06-11 1:44:27 AM  

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