Brazil Wants to Abandon a 34,000-Ton Ship at Sea. It Would be an Environmental Disaster

Source: https://time.com/6251526/brazil-abandoned-ship-environmental-disaster/

Author: Ciara Nugent

Somewhere in the South Atlantic ocean right now, a 34,000-ton, 870-ft. aircraft carrier is floating aimlessly on the waves. The vessel, caught in an international dispute over its toxic contents, is about to become one of the biggest pieces of trash in the ocean. The São Paulo, as the ship is known, has been stuck in limbo for five months. Brazil’s navy sold the 60-year-old vessel—the largest in its fleet—for scrap to a Turkish shipyard in 2021, and in August 2022, it set off for Turkey from a naval base in Rio de Janeiro.

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Brazil Set to Violate Three International Environmental Treaties in Sinking PCB-Laden Aircraft Carrier in the Atlantic

Source: https://conta.cc/3HKvCpE

Brussels, Belgium. January 31, 2023. As feared by the coalition of environmental and labour rights NGOs following the fate of the former aircraft carrier SÃO PAULO, the Brazilian Navy has seized the massive 265 meter-long ship and announced the intention to sink it in the Atlantic, instead of allowing it to be recycled as initially planned just a few months ago when it was sold to a Turkish breaking yard.

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MPs “surprised and disappointed” as government rejects key plastic waste recommendations

Source: https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/52/environment-food-and-rural-affairs-committee/news/175668/mps-surprised-and-disappointed-as-government-rejects-key-plastic-waste-recommendations/

Author: U.K. Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee

The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee has expressed surprise and disappointment after the government disagreed with key recommendations in its report on dealing with the growing problem of plastic waste. The cross-party MPs’ parliamentary scrutiny body conducted an extensive inquiry beginning in July 2021. The headline recommendation of its report, published in November 2022, called for a ban on the export of all plastic waste – a large amount of which ends up being illegally dumped – by the end of 2027.  

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Judge: Company must pay for rejected exports

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/plastics/2023/01/24/judge-company-must-pay-for-rejected-exports/

Author: Marissa Heffernan

A federal judge ruled that a Burnaby, British Columbia company owes an international shipping company $4.3 million Canadian dollars over plastics shipments rejected by the Thai government, the second such suit brought against the company. That’s about $3.2 million USD. Hapag-Lloyd Aktiengesellschaft took legal action against materials exporter Golden Trust Trading on March 18, 2022 after the shipping giant said it transported 33 containers of PET, PP and PVC film bales from Vancouver to Bangkok in spring 2019 that were rejected by the Thai government.

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With no port to dock, an aircraft carrier that was stationary in Pernambuco now roams the sea

Source: https://www.folhape.com.br/noticias/sem-porto-para-atracar-porta-avioes-que-estava-parado-em-pernambuco/255430/

Author: Folha de Pernambuco, translated from Portuguese

Former flagship of the French Navy, the aircraft carrier Foch , renamed São Paulo in 2000 when it took on the Brazilian flag, wanders the sea in search of a haven of refuge, under the risk of ending its days at the bottom of the ocean. The Brazilian Navy announced on Friday (20) that it is mooring its old hull, full of asbestos , paint and other toxic waste, at a point in the Atlantic Ocean 315 kilometers from the Brazilian coast , to prevent the ship from drifting.

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Will the death ship São Paulo sink into the Atlantic?

Source: https://www.evrensel.net/haber/480097/olum-gemisi-s-o-paulo-atlantike-mi-batirilacak

Author: Ramis Sağlam, translated from Turkish

Former Brazilian Aircraft Carrier São Paulo, which contains hazardous toxic waste materials, was captured by the Brazilian navy on Friday. The Brazilian navy made an official statement, claiming that the ship should be moved to the open sea as much as possible. This statement said, “Will the ship be sunk in the Atlantic Ocean?” raised the question.

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Brazilian Navy Suddenly Seizes its Old Warship Forcing it to Sea

Source: https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Brazilian-Navy-Suddenly-Seizes-its-Old-Warship-Forcing-it-to-Sea.html?soid=1114999858498&aid=f6DRqr_QmhA

Brussels, Belgium. Jan 21, 2023.  The former Brazilian Aircraft Carrier named SÃO PAULO, laden with asbestos, PCBs and other toxic waste materials, was seized on Friday and forced out to sea by the Brazilian Navy claiming in an official notice yesterday the move had to be done  as the vessel was supposedly in imminent danger of running aground or sinking off the Brazilian coast.  Green groups that have been closely following the saga of the SÃO PAULO were shocked over this move and are not convinced by the Navy's sudden rationale that the ship poses an imminent danger.

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'Advanced’ Recycling of Plastic Using High Heat and Chemicals Is Costly and Environmentally Problematic, A New Government Study Finds

Source: https://insideclimatenews.org/news/19012023/plastic-advanced-recycling-cost-environmental-impact/

Author: James Bruggers

The plastics industry’s quest to solve the problem of plastic waste through so-called “advanced” recycling—using chemical additives and sometimes extremely high heat to turn waste back into new plastics—is costly and comes with significant environmental impacts, according to new research from the federal government’s National Renewable Energy Lab in Colorado. Government researchers singled out two prominent “advanced” technologies—pyrolysis and gasification—as particularly problematic, saying they should not even be considered “closed-loop” recycling technologies.

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Brazil Refuses to Allow its Own Toxic Aircraft Carrier to Dock

Source: https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Brazil-Refuses-to-Allow-its-Own-Toxic-Aircraft-Carrier-to-Dock.html?soid=1114999858498&aid=TmVjLtxt1uU

Brussels, Belgium. January 19, 2023. Three months after its return to Brazil, from an aborted voyage to Turkey, the toxic aircraft carrier SÃO PAULO continues to be towed in circles off the coast of Pernambuco state, Brazil, with no plan or effort by the Brazilian Environment Agency (IBAMA) or Brazilian Navy to provide the vessel a safe mooring place.  This failure to act comes after a Salvage Master inspector declared the ship is taking on water and needs repair and the owners of the ship threatened to abandon the vessel.

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Parliament backs export ban on all waste destined for disposal

Source: https://www.euractiv.com/section/energy-environment/news/parliament-backs-export-ban-on-all-waste-destined-for-disposal/

Author: Valentina Romano

The Parliament’s report on the EU’s waste shipment regulation was adopted by a large majority, with 594 votes in favour, 5 against and 43 abstentions. The law is now ready to enter the final stages of adoption, with talks to be scheduled later this year between the European Parliament and EU member states to finalise the text.

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European parliament agrees to ban plastic waste exports outside the EU

Source: https://www.maltatoday.com.mt/news/europe/120781/european_parliament_agrees_to_ban_plastic_waste_exports_outside_the_eu#.ZC4E63bMJD_

Author: Kurt Sansone

A proposal to ban plastic waste exports outside the EU negotiated by Labour MEP Cyrus Engerer received overwhelming support in the European Parliament on Monday. The proposed ban was supported by 93% of MEPs in a clear sign of parliament’s will to stop the EU from exporting its waste problem.

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Ankara, EU Commission meet to discuss ‘waste’

Source: https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/ankara-eu-commission-meet-to-discuss-waste-180050

Author: Hurriyet Daily News

The European Commission and the Turkish trade and environment ministries have discussed the EU’s Waste Shipment Regulation draft in Brussels, with Ankara demanding the end of waste shipment from Europe to Türkiye. The Turkish delegation emphasized that the prevention of illegal waste shipment and its damage to the environment is a “shared goal.”

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Opinion: The Lead Industry’s Continuing Influence and Its Consequences

Source: https://undark.org/2023/01/12/the-lead-industrys-continuing-influence-and-its-consequences/

Author: Perry Gottesfeld

Given the negative publicity about the lead paint in our homes poisoning children and lead pipes contaminating our water, most people might assume that the lead industry is suffering a slow death. But even as our understanding of low-level lead exposure hazards has grown, global lead production actually increased by 75 percent between 2001 and 2017. In the United States, according to the most recent federal data, lead usage grew 26 percent over this same period, largely due to a rise in ammunition production and lead battery manufacturing.

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Activists sue French food firm Danone over use of plastics

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/10/activists-sue-french-food-firm-danone-plastics-footprint

Author: Karen McVeigh

Danone, the French yoghurt and bottled water company, is being taken to court by three environmental groups who accuse it of failing to sufficiently reduce its plastic footprint. The company behind Evian and Volvic mineral water was failing in its duties to act under a groundbreaking French law, the groups said.

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Danone to face French court over plastic megapollution

Source: https://www.clientearth.org/latest/press-office/press/danone-to-face-french-court-over-plastic-megapollution/

Author: ClientEarth

Three environmental groups are filing a lawsuit against Danone over its global plastic pollution. ClientEarth, Surfrider Foundation Europe and Zero Waste France have filed the lawsuit against the French company, whose annual sales top more than £24bn euros, in the Paris Tribunal Judiciaire – the equivalent of the UK High Court. The French ‘Duty of Vigilance’ law demands that companies over a certain size assess and prevent the impacts their operations have on the environment and human rights, via a ‘vigilance plan’.

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