freediver
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Posts: 48833
At my desk.
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http://www.smh.com.au/news/Business/CSR-in-court-over-river-chemical-spill/2007/07/04/1183351245438.html
Building materials giant CSR has been charged over a chemical spill which closed two kilometres of the Parramatta River in Sydney last year.
The NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change on Tuesday initiated action against CSR in the Land and Environment Court which could lead to a $1 million fine for the company.
Around 1,000 litres of the gluey chemical acrylic polymer, used in paint, clogged the Sydney river between Rydalmere and Olympic Park last July.
While the white residue was not toxic to humans, it caused devastation to local plants and wildlife, while ferries were cancelled for two days during the clean-up.
A spokesman for CSR denied the company had anything to do with the chemical spill.
Gladstone study finds no link to cancers
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Gladstone-study-finds-no-link-to-cancers/2007/09/20/1189881643518.html
A health study has found no link to environmental factors in a spate of cancer cases in the central Queensland industrial city of Gladstone.
The study was commissioned after locals raised concerns pollution from the city's industrial plants could be behind a rise in cases of chronic lymphoid leukaemia (CLL).
Queensland Health figures from 1996 to 2004 showed there were 19 cases of CLL reported in the Gladstone area - 10 more than could be expected over the same period.
WA govt still baffled by lead in kids
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/WA-govt-still-baffled-by-lead-in-kids/2007/11/29/1196037057356.html
The West Australian government is still trying to work out why a number of children are showing persistently high lead levels in the port town of Esperance which was contaminated by lead.
Thousands of birds started falling from the sky early this year before testing revealed lead had been blown across the town during ship loading.
The WA Government has spent more than $7 million on the clean-up of Esperance.
SA steel town show high lung cancer rate
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/SA-steel-town-show-high-lung-cancer-rate/2007/12/06/1196812852968.html
Residents of the South Australian steel town of Whyalla have a 50 per cent higher chance of contracting lung cancer, with the disease mainly striking women, a new report shows.
The state government report, reported by News Ltd, has shown the occurrence of lung cancer is significantly greater in Whyalla - home to a OneSteel plant that manufactures 1.2 million tonnes of steel annually - than in towns with similar size and industry.
Children were more likely to be admitted to hospital for respiratory infections in Whyalla than in other regions in the state, including the lead-smelting town of Port Pirie, Port Augusta, Port Lincoln, Mount Gambier and Victor Harbor.
Asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic hepatitis were also unexpectedly prevalent compared with the other towns.
The report found reasonable evidence of "biological plausibility" for the diseases found in relation to iron-rich dust exposure.
But state Health Minister John Hill moved to allay fears the red dust emitted by the OneSteel plant caused high lung cancer rates.
"There is no clear connection between the incidence of red dust and the pattern of these illnesses in the community," he told News Ltd.
Brockovich leads US case against Alcoa
http://news.smh.com.au/brockovich-leads-us-case-against-alcoa/20080302-1w87.html
Erin Brockovich will figurehead a legal case in the US against mining giant Alcoa's West Australian alumina refinery, which claimants say has destroyed their town.
Ms Brockovich, who Julia Roberts portrayed in a Hollywood movie about her environmental campaigning, will represent clients who claim Alcoa's Wagerup alumina refinery, 140km south of Perth, has caused them serious illness.
About 160 residents from nearby Yarloop have complained of respiratory problems, skin irritation, sore throats and eyes, nose bleeds, cancers and organ failure during the past 11 years.
They blame emissions from the 24-year-old refinery.
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