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This website provides resources on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) such as pesticides, dioxins, PCBs, and wastes. Valuable examples of community monitoring of health and environmental impacts of toxic chemicals are also furnished.

Further, there is an entire section devoted to chemical safety in its proper socio-political context or in relation to issues such as globalization and people's empowerment.

 

PCB disposal site slated to be built on Okinawa

By David Allen

ONNA, Okinawa — Japan is planning to build a disposal facility for
Toxic polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, at an Air Self-Defense Force base in this central Okinawa village.

A senior Defense Facilities Administration Naha Bureau representative
met with Onna officials recently to brief them on the project and seek
their approval for storing about 1,800 drums of PCB waste — about 300
tons — discovered when a former U.S. communications site in the city
was returned in 1996.

PCBs are oily compounds used as coolants and lubricants in a wide range
of electrical equipment, including transformers and capacitors. They
are good insulators and do not burn easily. Products that use PCBs included fluorescent lighting, electrical capacitors and hydraulic oils.

The facility also may be used to store PCBs found at other sites
throughout Japan, a Defense Facilities official said.

But Mayor Fumiyasu Shikina said he is concerned about having such a
facility in his village, a tourist destination on the East China Sea
sometimes referred to as the “Gold Coast.”

Immediately after the Defense Facilities official’s visit, the mayor
Met with members of the village council, fishermen’s association and local community boards. Several said they preferred the PCB sludge be removed and dumped elsewhere.

Under the U.S.-Japan Status of Forces Agreement, the United States is
not obligated to restore land to its original condition.

That means it falls to Japanese officials to handle anything left
behind, including toxic waste, the Defense Facilities official said,
noting the PCB sludge was not discovered until after the land was
returned.

Part of the returned property now is being used as a Japan Air
Self-Defense Force communications facility.

Defense Facilities conducted a three-year study of disposal methods and
decided earlier this year that a decomposition method would be the best
way to handle the PCBs found here. The agency will conduct an
environmental assessment early next year.

PCBs were banned in the United States in 1977 after studies showed they
did not break down easily when discarded.

They also were found to have caused health problems; the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has determined prolonged exposure may
cause cancer in humans.

The most common reactions to PCB exposure are skin rashes and acne,
according to the Agency of Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.

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İheal toxics, 2003
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In commemoration of World No Pesticide Day: HEAL Toxics calls for Paraquat Ban

Angry tears as MPs hear of Agent Orange's awful legacy (by New Zealand Herald)

PCB disposal sites slated to be built on Okinawa (by Pacific Stars and Stripes)

France: Government report claims BAYER pesticide GAUCHO responsible for bee deaths

Traces of banned toxic insecticide found in land animals (by Japan Times)

Global Insecticide meeting intensifies commitment to reduce poisonings form Acutely Toxic Pesticides (by ICFS)

Silence on pesticides in cigarettes (by The Age, Australia)