While
asbestos dangers are well documented, history has long avoided eliminating the
threat it poses to human health.
We
are starting to progress in our waste habits by recycling different streams of
waste and using closed landfills constructively. Composting food waste and
recycling plastics, glass, metals, cardboard and newspapers is our way of life.
We are realizing the importance of installing waste-to-energy(WTE) plans on
closed and active landfills to capture energy.
Separating
recyclables from municipal waste before it is dumped in landfills, as well as
landfill mining for recyclables are now prominent trends.
We
create 250 million tons of waste per year. By practicing reduce, reuse and
recycle, we are taking the right steps to minimize waste to landfills.
Sustainability
Liability
Many
companies are touting zero-waste-to-landfill from their manufacturing
operations, however, when the actual facility is taken into account, that may
be a false claim.
Companies
are hiring or internally promoting sustainability officers who are responsible
for complying with all environmental regulations, such as the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). CERCLA
requires treatments that permanently and significantly reduce volume, mobility
of hazardous substances and most importantly, toxicity.
While companies like General
Motors, Ford and Chrysler tout sustainability achievements, over the past five
years these companies have closed or sold approximately 180 manufacturing
facilities. Most of these facilities were built before 1979 and all had to have
asbestos-containing material installed in them when they were built.
Asbestos permeates most facilities
built before 1979: utilities, military bases, government buildings, refineries,
factories, homes and landfills: collectively known as our “built environment.”
Asbestos has been documented in archaeological diggings found in pottery and chinking of homes in Scandinavia
from 300 B.C.
History Lessons
The use of asbestos has a long
history. Asbestos has been used for more than 2,000 years, called by the
ancient Greeks “inextinguishable,” because of superior resistance to fire.
The Greek, Strabo, as well as the
Roman, Pliny the Elder, noticed the sickness of the lungs and the early deaths
of slaves who worked in the asbestos mines, and also in slaves who wove asbestos
table clothes, napkins, burial garments and asbestos into wicks for the Eternal
Flame of the Vestal Virgins.
Little known to Strabo and Pliny
the Elder, their observations of slaves contracting lung illness would become a
fatal, proven fact almost 2,000 years later.
Strabo and Pliny never could have
realized or predicted the lung disease caused by asbestos would become the
world’s greatest industrial disaster ever known to man and the largest class
action law suits ever to swamp the court system. As right as their observations
were on the fact that asbestos caused “sickness of the lungs in those who
worked with it,” they also could not have predicted that more than 3,000 people
in the United States are diagnosed with Mesothelioma each year, 125 million
people worldwide encounter asbestos in the home or workplace; every five
minutes someone in the world dies from asbestos-related illnesses.
This number amounts to 100,000
people per year and is expected to increase to 5 to 10 million people by 2030. It
is a fact that every year there are more people killed by asbestos than in road
accidents. Although used through the centuries, the use of asbestos flourished
at the onset of the industrial revolution in the 18th century when
factories boomed and asbestos was seen as miracle mineral due to its fire
resistant, chemical resistant and tinsel strength. Industry created many
different products that included asbestos.
In
the railroad industry it was used to line refrigeration units, boxcars, and
cabosses, and the material was found to be especially useful as insulation for
pipes, boilers and fireboxes in stream locomotives and as refractory brick in
the coal-fired engines and furnaces. The automobile industry used asbestos in
brake linings and clutches, as well as in wiring necessary for lighting and
ignitions.
The
construction industry found many uses of asbestos for factory and home building
products: roofing material (both felt and cement board with asbestos embedded
in it), pipe and boiler covering, floor tile, taping, acoustical ceiling tiles,
Transite furnace flu, and most dangerously as vermiculite in attic insulation
and plant soil additive. Vermiculite was manufactured in Libby, Mont., by W.R.
Grace who also manufactured asbestos-containing spray-on fireproofing known as
Monokote. Monokote was widely used in thousands of buildings throughout the
world. One well known site being the World Trade Center, which still had asbestos
containing material when it was attacked.
Referred
to as “Transite in the United States,” the material permeates Australia and
many other warm climate countries.
The
construction industry, by far, gave asbestos-containing material products a great
deal of uses, as did the shipbuilding industry. Because of the widespread commercial
uses of asbestos, the cases of asbestos and mesothelioma started to come to
light.
In
1899, British physician, Dr. H. Montague Murray, discovered the first case of asbestos
and recorded an abstract named “Curious Bodies.” In 1906, French factory
inspector, Auribolt, discovered the first asbestos lung disease, mesothelioma
in 50 people. The use of asbestos and its dangers became so common that by 1918
life insurance companies started to charge higher premiums for asbestos
workers.
Too
Little, Too Late
Unfortunately
1918 was too late, because as the years went on and asbestos diseases became
more prevalent and obvious, many financially solid white glove insurance
companies were forced into bankruptcy by asbestos lawsuits, as were myriad of
companies who manufactured asbestos-containing material.
By
1930 it was well known to manufactures that asbestos-containing products were a
cause of lung disease with death to follow, but many chose to not expose the
truth.
The
U.S. Public Health Service recognized the effects asbestos has on human health
and recommended guidelines for asbestos exposure as early as 1938, but with the
onset of World War II, the Public Health Service recommendations were ignored.
The
expansion of existing military bases, the building of new military bases,
amplified shipbuilding, and new government buildings, such as the Pentagon, all
used asbestos.
The
Defense Logistics Agency during World War II bought and stored in silos around
the country raw asbestos in case asbestos did not become available.
With
so much asbestos in our built environment around the world and the never-ending
and ongoing illnesses caused by asbestos, coupled with the landfill shortage,
why are we not destroying the asbestos to prevent the harm to humans?
Methods
of Destruction
There
are U.S.-Environmental-Protection-Agency-approved technologies that destroy
asbestos by high temperature: plasma torch, vitrification and hearth oven, and
a non-thermal process, ABCOV®, which works by a chemical-physical reaction.
With
the ABCOV® process, asbestos destruction is followed through the process until
the asbestos is destroyed. In high-temperature processes, asbestos has to run
through the process, be cooled down and be tested for asbestos. If asbestos is
found in the batch that was run through the high temperature units, it must be
put back through the unit until destroyed.
Asbestos
is and will be a killer as long as it remains in our built environment. A Wall
Street Journal “Pepper … and Salt” cartoon that has sat on my desk for at least
17 years says it best: A father sitting on the couch looking at his son’s
report card with great disappointment and letting his son know how he felt. The
son replied: “If your generation doesn’t learn to save the planet, it won’t
matter if my generation can’t read or write.”
Tony Nocito, Managing Member of the ABCOV® Companies, LLC, has developed, commercialized and markets the ABCOV asbestos destruction process. He has 25 years asbestos abatement experience and 26 years construction/demolition industry experience. Visit ABCOV® Blog. Guest Blogger Featured in Construction & Demolition Recycling.
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