The Fort Worth Press - Battery boom drives Bangladesh lead poisoning epidemic

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 64.496875
ALL 81.380528
AMD 369.184597
ANG 1.789884
AOA 917.999724
ARS 1395.381205
AUD 1.3837
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.697085
BAM 1.667512
BBD 2.020641
BDT 123.098172
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.378875
BIF 2985.894118
BMD 1
BND 1.270084
BOB 6.932419
BRL 4.930102
BSD 1.003253
BTN 94.565375
BWP 13.432689
BYN 2.835207
BYR 19600
BZD 2.017742
CAD 1.365255
CDF 2315.999881
CHF 0.779175
CLF 0.022638
CLP 890.970154
CNY 6.80505
CNH 6.800575
COP 3738.9
CRC 460.209132
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.012576
CZK 20.69725
DJF 178.651968
DKK 6.36203
DOP 59.661791
DZD 132.335032
EGP 52.717504
ERN 15
ETB 156.643406
EUR 0.85136
FJD 2.18685
FKP 0.734821
GBP 0.736365
GEL 2.680059
GGP 0.734821
GHS 11.286699
GIP 0.734821
GMD 72.999748
GNF 8804.55958
GTQ 7.660794
GYD 209.901226
HKD 7.827605
HNL 26.670759
HRK 6.419303
HTG 131.399121
HUF 303.012017
IDR 17365.95
ILS 2.91051
IMP 0.734821
INR 94.41075
IQD 1314.280599
IRR 1312900.000132
ISK 122.430342
JEP 0.734821
JMD 158.020607
JOD 0.709014
JPY 156.800501
KES 129.150246
KGS 87.420497
KHR 4024.093407
KMF 418.999754
KPW 899.950939
KRW 1467.765006
KWD 0.307795
KYD 0.836058
KZT 464.61503
LAK 22016.463537
LBP 89533.723815
LKR 323.055346
LRD 184.10709
LSL 16.368643
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.604889
LYD 6.345837
MAD 9.195197
MDL 17.26071
MGA 4165.565455
MKD 52.51478
MMK 2099.606786
MNT 3578.902576
MOP 8.092183
MRU 40.138456
MUR 46.820229
MVR 15.455001
MWK 1739.54559
MXN 17.262901
MYR 3.919502
MZN 63.905048
NAD 16.368783
NGN 1361.979903
NIO 36.917043
NOK 9.29545
NPR 151.292686
NZD 1.679839
OMR 0.384501
PAB 1.003253
PEN 3.475021
PGK 4.365952
PHP 60.544997
PKR 279.534225
PLN 3.600795
PYG 6140.362095
QAR 3.656974
RON 4.479694
RSD 99.945022
RUB 74.639547
RWF 1470.817685
SAR 3.780174
SBD 8.032258
SCR 14.098598
SDG 600.501353
SEK 9.25905
SGD 1.268503
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.547226
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 573.372496
SRD 37.431033
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.887684
SVC 8.778354
SYP 110.543945
SZL 16.363923
THB 32.219503
TJS 9.375794
TMT 3.51
TND 2.910164
TOP 2.40776
TRY 45.363901
TTD 6.786684
TWD 31.373302
TZS 2608.394049
UAH 43.928641
UGX 3752.28603
UYU 40.11647
UZS 12157.202113
VES 496.20906
VND 26311
VUV 118.026144
WST 2.704092
XAF 559.236967
XAG 0.012394
XAU 0.000212
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.808106
XDR 0.695511
XOF 559.267959
XPF 101.680898
YER 238.579251
ZAR 16.412899
ZMK 9001.200987
ZMW 19.111685
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.5

    -0.06%

  • VOD

    -0.4400

    15.69

    -2.8%

  • NGG

    -1.9400

    85.91

    -2.26%

  • RIO

    -2.4000

    103.11

    -2.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.97

    -0.17%

  • AZN

    -2.4000

    182.52

    -1.31%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    24.57

    +1.38%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

  • RELX

    -1.5900

    34.16

    -4.65%

  • BCC

    -1.4800

    72.76

    -2.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.15

    -0.15%

  • BTI

    -1.4800

    58.08

    -2.55%

  • BP

    -0.8200

    43.81

    -1.87%

Battery boom drives Bangladesh lead poisoning epidemic
Battery boom drives Bangladesh lead poisoning epidemic / Photo: © AFP

Battery boom drives Bangladesh lead poisoning epidemic

Bangladeshi Junayed Akter is 12 years old but the toxic lead coursing through his veins has left him with the diminutive stature of someone several years younger.

Text size:

Akter is one of 35 million children -- around 60 percent of all children in the South Asian nation -- who have dangerously high levels of lead exposure.

The causes are varied, but his mother blames his maladies on a since-shuttered factory that hastily scrapped and recycled old vehicle batteries for profit, in the process poisoning the air and the earth of his small village.

"It would start at night, and the whole area would be filled with smoke. You could smell this particular odour when you breathed," Bithi Akter told AFP.

"The fruit no longer grew during the season. One day, we even found two dead cows at my aunt's house."

Medical tests showed Junayed's blood had twice the level of lead deemed by the World Health Organization to cause serious, and likely irreversible, mental impairment in young children.

"From the second grade onward, he didn't want to listen to us anymore, he didn't want to go to school," Bithi said, as her son sat next to her while gazing blankly out at the courtyard of their home.

"He cried all the time too."

Lead poisoning is not a new phenomenon in Bangladesh, and the causes are manifold.

They include the heavy metal's widespread and continued use in paint, in defiance of a government ban, and its use as an adulterant in turmeric spice powder to improve its colour and perceived quality.

A great many cases are blamed on informal battery recycling factories that have proliferated around the country in response to rising demand.

Children exposed to dangerous levels of lead risk decreased intelligence and cognitive performance, anaemia, stunted growth and lifelong neurological disorders.

The factory in the Akter family's village closed after sustained complaints from the community.

But environmental watchdog Pure Earth believes there could be 265 such sites elsewhere in the country.

"They break down old batteries, remove the lead and melt it down to make new ones," Pure Earth's Mitali Das told AFP.

"They do all this in the open air," she added. "The toxic fumes and acidic water produced during the operation pollute the air, soil and water."

- 'They've killed our village' -

In Fulbaria, a village that sits a few hours' drive north of the capital Dhaka, operations at another battery recycling factory owned by a Chinese company are in full swing.

On one side are verdant paddy fields. On the other, a pipe spews murky water into a brackish pool bordered by dead lands, caked with thick orange mud.

"As a child, I used to bring food to my father when he was in the fields. The landscape was magnificent, green, the water was clear," engineer and local resident Rakib Hasan, 34, told AFP.

"You see what it looks like now. It's dead, forever," he added. "They've killed our village."

Hasan complained about the factory's pollution, prompting a judge to declare it illegal and order the power be shut off -- a decision later reversed by the country's supreme court.

"The factory bought off the local authorities," Hasan said. "Our country is poor, many people are corrupt."

Neither the company nor the Chinese embassy in Dhaka responded to AFP's requests for comment on the factory's operations.

Syeda Rizwana Hasan, who helms Bangladesh's environment ministry, declined to comment on the case because it was still before the courts.

"We regularly conduct operations against the illegal production and recycling of electric batteries," she said.

"But these efforts are often insufficient given the scale of the phenomenon."

- 'Unaware of the dangers' -

Informal battery recycling is a booming business in Bangladesh.

It is driven largely by the mass electrification of rickshaws -- a formerly pedal-powered means of conveyance popular in both big cities and rural towns.

More than four million rickshaws are found on Bangladeshi roads and authorities estimate the market for fitting them all with electric motors and batteries at around $870 million.

"It's the downside of going all-electric," said Maya Vandenant of the UN children's agency, which is pushing a strategy to clean up the industry with tighter regulations and tax incentives.

"Most people are unaware of the dangers," she said, adding that the public health impacts are forecast to be a 6.9 percent dent to the national economy.

Muhammad Anwar Sadat of Bangladesh's health ministry warned that the country could not afford to ignore the scale of the problem.

"If we do nothing," he told AFP, "the number of people affected will multiply three or fourfold in the next two years."

A.Williams--TFWP