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march 5, 2003 CEE Bankwatch Network *
Hnuti DUHA
bankwatch again questions proposed ebrd
funding for aluminium plant in czech republic
report: toxic threat ignored
An aluminium plant currently being built in
the northern Czech Republic will produce
considerable more toxic pollution than the
plant's backers claim, according to a report
commissioned by the CEE Bankwatch Network. In
probably its most damning statement, the
report - an independent analysis of the
plant's documentation - calls existing data
on the toxic pollution likely to be created
"vague and worthless."
Based on the report's findings - which show
that Mexican company NEMAK underestimated the
number and amount of cancer-causing
substances likely to be produced - Bankwatch
is calling on the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) not to
finance further construction.
"NEMAK seriously underestimates the plant's
toxic pollution, and has not listed any
measures for reducing toxic pollution. We are
calling on the EBRD to refuse to fund such a
project without guarantees that people living
nearby will be protected," says Pavel Pribyl
of Bankwatch's Czech member group Hnuti
DUHA.
The report was written by an independent
expert who analysed documentation provided by
NEMAK, including the plant's environmental
impact assessment and construction permit. It
shows that the potential toxicity of the
solid and liquid wastes and of toxic gas
emissions were not properly assessed during
the project preparation phase. In its
conclusion, the report finds that from the
"documentation provided, the environmental
risks of the plan can only be assessed
roughly". Furthermore, the report goes on,
"the number of other inconsistencies
indicates that the authors did not have any
expertise on waste management and that the
assessment of this field was made by lay
people".
In particular, NEMAK ignored the fact that
the melting of aluminium will quite surely be
accompanied by the production of dangerous
polychlorinated dibenzodioxins and
dibenzofurans, as well as a number of
polyaromatic hydrocarbons. The project
documentation fails to mention the first two,
and from the third group mentions only one -
benzo(a)pyren. Short-exposure to higher level
of dioxins can cause skin disease and harm
the functioning of the liver. Long-term
exposure harms the immune, nervous, and
endocrine systems and can lead to cancer or
cause male infertility. Also, although
today's technologies make it possible to
decrease harmful emissions to very low
levels, the background data provided by NEMAK
contains no mention of such measures.
Similarly, the project documentation is
silent about other, probably more serious,
environmental risks. For one, it fails to
mention certain toxic wastes that will be
created in high volumes, including dust from
combustion exhaust cleaning and sawdust and
filings polluted with cooling emulsion.
Neither is there any mention of which
substances will be present in the
contaminated wastewater, nor does NEMAK say
how it will handle such wastes.
In writing to the EBRD, Bankwatch enclosed
an English-language summary of the report.
Says Pribyl, "We are convinced that the
construction should be stopped until it can
be proven that the health of people living
near the plant will not be endangered by
toxic substances. We hope that the EBRD will
read the summary of the analysis carefully,
and will take the project's environmental
risks into account when considering
financing."
The Mexican company, NEMAK Europe ltd., has
already built part of the factory, which when
completed would have an annual production of
1,600,000 aluminium engine heads. It is
seeking loans from the EBRD to complete the
project. The project has a long and checked
history in the Czech Republic; an earlier
proposal to build the factory in Pilsen
failed in the face of community opposition,
and the current site near the city of Most
would destroy one of the few unpolluted areas
in a heavily polluted region of the
country.
The CEE Bankwatch Network is a coalition of
environmental organisations from Central and
Eastern Europe. The network's mission is to
prevent environmentally and socially harmful
impacts of international development finance,
and to promote alternative solutions and
public participation. Note: The English
summary of deficiencies in the area of
environmental risk assessment, based on a
document analysis of the NEMAK project
elaborated for Hnuti DUHA and CEE Bankwatch
Network by Dr. Vlastimil Simek, ChemEko, in
January 2003, is available upon request.
read more in the
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