Rare Earth Minerals Turn Villages to Ruins
Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews Baotou, Inner Mongolia is China's largest rare earth mineral production base. Although it is a precious mineral resource, rare earth imposes great dangers of pollution. Recently, French media reported from Baotou. Entitled "In China, rare earths are killing villages", the report highlighted massive environmental pollution. It revealed the impact of the production of rare earth minerals on local residents, animals and land. The following is our report. French media 'Le Monde' reported from Baotou, stating that by aerial viewpoint, it looks like a large lake, fed by numerous tributaries. On site, it is actually an opaque discharge covering an area of 10 km2. Surrounding the industrial plants producing 17 minerals are reject waste waters loaded with chemicals. There are no fish or algae The Le Monde article introduced that rock from Bayan obo rare earth ore mine, located 120 kilometers away, are sent here for treatment. The concentration of rare earth in the rocks is very low and must be separated and purified by hydrometallurgical processes and acid baths. In the effluent basin are exist all sorts of toxic chemicals and radioactive elements such as thorium. Ingestion of these toxins causes cancer of the pancreas, lung and blood. A pungent odor exudes within radius of 10 miles. Local villagers have been suffering from cancer. Rows of brown houses in the village have been reduced to rubble. Sichuan environmentalist Chen Yunfei indicates that rare earth refining process causes great environmental pollution and destruction. People are unaware of the specific dangers of this project, and the specialists involved in the decision-making. Chen Yunfei: "Some officials only work on the image projects for profit. They relocate once the money has been made. Some officials collude with the business, caring about nothing but profit, leaving the mess for the public." According to local residents, Baotou used to be a vast grassland. In 1958 the state enterprise Baotou Iron and Steel Company began producing rare earth production. By the end of 1980, locals found that the plant was in trouble. Last year, China Environment News reported that Baotou Iron and Steel Group's tailing dam leakage has caused damage to five surrounding villages. It has affected more than 3000 farmers, and ruined more than 3,295 Acres of farmland. Ma Peng, former Director of the Baotou Rare Earth Research Institute, indicated that due to the lack of a barrier below the tailing dam, the mining waste is directly discharging into the Yellow River. The discharge is at a rate of 300m per year. The residents also said that further pollution has been caused by other industries and thermal power plants. These industries followed rare earth production by the Baotou Iron and Steel Company. Local residents have to breathe air saturated with sulfuric acid and coal dust. Coal dust is airbourne around the houses. Cows, horses, chickens and goats are being killed by these poisons. The locals have fled, and Xinguang Sancun village has now decreased from 2000 villagers to 300. Every family is hit with illness. After 20 years of complaints to the local government, the villagers have finally won promises of financial compensation. These have only been partially fulfilled. Miss Hao, a resident of Baotou: "We all know. The government is too dark. No one cares about the people, whether they live or die, not to mention the pollution." For many years, there have been calls for attention for the issue of Baotou tailing dam discharging thorium radiation to Baotou and into the Yellow River. The hazards and pollution caused by the Baotou tailing dam have never been effectively alleviated. Environmentalist Chen Yunfei: "This is an investment that has hurt several generations. It has polluted the whole environment. This high cost investment ought to be condemned. Our future generations are going to suffer for it." China Environment News indicated that Baotou is located in the stratum fracture zone. In the event of a major earthquake or large-scale rainfall, the rupture of the tailing dam will threaten the surrounding five villages, as well as tens of thousands of lives of the Baotou Iron and Steel workers. If the tailings flow into the Yellow River, it will cause serious pollution to the river. 《神韵》2011世界巡演新亮点 http://www.ShenYunPerformingArts.org/
Comments
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To the capitalism haters, the essential concept of capitalism is individual rights--especially property rights. This video shows a government that does NOT protect individual property rights. These are not market failures. These are government failures. https://mises.org/library/environmentalism-and-economic-freedom-case-private-property-rights
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Thank you for posting! We would love to have a follow up; because of the importance of these affairs we linked up this video with the location of Baotou on our Central Map(s).
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And some idiots still wonder why we leave rare earth metal production to the Chinese... Do they want a 25 square kilometer radioactive thorium lake fuming in their neighborhood? Not likely, besides they do it in exchange for worthless FIAT dollars! They may as well be getting paid in Microsoft live points, it's the same thing!
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Capitalism is wonderful, isn't it?
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International Journal of Health Services:
"In the single largest prospective study of 150,000 children born in Hiroshima-
Nagasaki during 1948–1964, no statistically significant increase of any
untoward pregnancy outcome was found for children born to parents exposed
to ionizing radiation from the bombs."
If the intense radiation from atomic bombs do not cause congenital defects or cancer, how is low level radiation in Bukit Merah going to cause such defects and cancer? -
Thorium
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Seems China needs their own EPA.
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Rare earth mining and refining is especially dirty. Not only are the tailings and waste from separation and refinement toxic, they are also slightly radioactive due to the presence of thorium.
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It is erroneous to blame rare-earths metals for the pollution. Similar harm can occur from the processing of copper, gold, iron and virtually any other material dug out of the ground. Rare earths have been processed in Rochelle France for 30 years without any damage to the environment. The real issue is poor environmental standards and regulation.
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Ah...the furtive hunt for Unobtainium....will humans *ever* learn?
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I despair.
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That's the same reason they are in the Philippine Sea. One of the reasons the US is in Afghanistan.
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