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General Discussion >> General Board >> Asbestos Found In Imported Toys And Building Mater http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1636488862 Message started by whiteknight on Nov 10th, 2021 at 6:14am |
Title: Asbestos Found In Imported Toys And Building Mater Post by whiteknight on Nov 10th, 2021 at 6:14am
Calls for more testing after asbestos found in imported toys and building materials :(
ABC News November 9 2021 Unions and anti-asbestos campaigners are demanding more testing at Australia's border after revelations the deadly mineral is still slipping into the country despite a strict ban. :( Key points: Asbestos has been banned in Australia since 2003 but is legal in a number of other countries In March, Border Force tested four shipments and all four were found to contain asbestos In September, asbestos was found in building materials imported from China Since the start of last year, foreign asbestos has been found in imported building materials, remote control cars, engine gaskets, billiard table irons and Sydney's new ferries. The manufacture, transport and importation of asbestos has been banned in Australia since 2003. Asbestosis sufferer and president of the Asbestos Victims Association, Peter Baxter, said he feared a new generation of exposure and disease. "Once you scrape it or drill it or break it and all that, you're releasing the fibres," he told 7.30. A remote controlled car One of the imported remote controlled cars found to contain asbestos. "The children's stuff, the toys, now that's wrong, that's really wrong because they're hammering the toys a bit, they're battering them, pulling them apart so they're at risk and I don't like that." Asbestos auditor Andrew Mantle said asbestos was readily available and legal in Asia, and its fire resistant properties meant it was used in a variety of products, particularly by manufacturing giant China. "One of the issues is that asbestos is incredibly cheap," he said. "For someone that's looking for a price break and bringing in 10 container loads of [plasterboard] sheeting because they can buy cheaper from China, you're playing Russian roulette." Asbestos found in building material :( A sign on a building says 'USG Boral'. USG Boral found asbestos in raw vermiculite it imported from China. The latest foreign asbestos discovery came in September when building material supplies company USG Boral found raw vermiculite it imported from China to make plasterboard was tainted with asbestos. The scare prompted testing across the nation where the plasterboard had been used, including at the Queen's Wharf construction site in Brisbane. The site was found free of asbestos. ACTU president Michele O'Neil said the fact asbestos was still entering the country almost 20 years after the ban was unacceptable. "We know that there are products that are coming in every day undetected and that is putting everyone at risk. So we're very concerned about the long-term health impacts of this." she told 7.30. "There is absolutely no safe level of asbestos exposure. Literally, one fibre can eventually lead to death. This is how dangerous this product is." Do you know more about this story? Contact 7.30 at 7.30@abc.net.au. Michele O'Neil stands in the ACTU Melbourne office. Michele O'Neil wants to see a global ban on asbestos. USG Boral declined 7.30's request for interview but in a statement said low levels of asbestos were found at each of its manufacturing sites in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. It said the product had been removed and the sites deep cleaned. "We have stopped using this vermiculite sourced from China," the statement said. "USG Boral wants all stakeholders to have confidence in our quality systems and response to any identified issues. "At USG Boral, the safety of our workers and customers is our number one priority in everything we do." Testing every container 'not practical' A row of stacked shipping containers by the side of a road. There are calls for more imports to be tested for asbestos. In 2016, the ABC ran a series of reports revealing asbestos contaminated building products from China had been used in the construction of portable structures, on a Brisbane high rise building and in the new children's hospital in Perth. Back then, Australian Border Force pledged a crackdown. Despite calls for more testing, Border Force figures show this year as few as four consignments were tested in March. All were tainted with asbestos. In June, seven were tested. The majority came back positive. Month Number of asbestos tests at the border Number of detections June 2021 7 5 May 2021 13 4 April 2021 16 2 March 2021 4 4 February 2021 9 3 January 2021 16 0 Source: Australian Border Force. Multiple detections within one consignment or shipment is counted as a single detection within the statistics Border Force declined 7.30's interview request but said it continued to target goods at risk of containing asbestos and regularly reviews and refines its targeting methodology. Ms O'Neil believed little progress had been made to stop asbestos since the issue was last in the headlines in 2016 and was scrutinised by a Senate inquiry. :( "The government has ignored recommendations that came from a Senate inquiry into the importation of asbestos-related products back in 2018. It made 26 recommendations but only six have ever been implemented. |
Title: Re: Asbestos Found In Imported Toys And Building Mater Post by Gnads on Nov 10th, 2021 at 6:24am
All shyte from China…….. again. >:(
Like AQIS the Border Force inspection is abysmal. |
Title: Re: Asbestos Found In Imported Toys And Building Mater Post by Valkie on Nov 10th, 2021 at 6:51am
Funny thing about asbestos.
The Egyptians knew about the health dangers of asbestos way way back. But modern man allegedly didn't.....because it was profitable. Asbestos manufacturers, and anybody that ever profited from it, should be held accountable for each and every asbestos related death or issue. They obviously knew the dangers but hid it. |
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