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- Xref: sparky misc.activism.progressive:8544 alt.activism:19009 talk.environment:4671
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!naughty-peahen
- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: More Evidence of a Crisis Over PVC
- Followup-To: talk.environment
- Date: 20 Nov 1992 01:04:30 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 53
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.19Nov1992.1704@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Greenbase -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- MORE EVIDENCE OF A CRISIS OVER PVC
- Greenpeace Report warns of dangers to children
-
- OSLO, Norway October 27, 1992 (GP) Norsk Hydro, one of Europe's
- largest producers of PVC began their campaign here to restore
- the image in Europe of the plastic PVC. The campaign moves to
- Sweden tomorrow and to London on Thursday. Simultaneously,
- Greenpeace launched its own report "PVC: A Toxic Waste in
- Disguise".
-
- The Greenpeace report details how all PVC plants emit VCM,
- a cancer causing and highly explosive organochlorine. It
- emphasises that PVC production involves the addition during
- manufacture of up to 4000 other toxic ingredients. Toxic
- additives can be released from PVC packaging into food, into
- a room with PVC flooring or into a child's digestive system
- if he or she chews a PVC toy.
-
- Norsk Hydro is launching a book called "PVC and the
- Environment". Their campaign follows hard on the heels of
- legal action taken in Vienna by Austria's PVC manufacturers
- against Greenpeace. In a case which opened Friday October 16,
- the manufacturers began litigation against Greenpeace Austria
- for damage to their reputation and for "malicious and unfactual
- attacks on PVC". Greenpeace had been running a billboard
- campaign depicting PVC as an environmental poison.
-
- A growing number of cities and federal states in Austria have
- declared themselves PVCfree, and banned the use of PVC in public
- construction. In Germany, the cities of Berlin and Bielfeld have
- also joined this movement.
-
- In the middle of October PVC manufacturers took part in the
- Chlorine Industry's Global Chlorine Symposium in Monte Carlo.
- A Greenpeace report presented at this meeting published
- confidential minutes revealing that a top chlorine producer
- Solvay has plans to target ten European countries, spending
- $US21 million over four years in a major campaign to improve
- the image of PVC.
-
- According to the memo, one of Solvay's aims is to promote the
- idea that PVC can be recycled. But a previous memo, also leaked
- to Greenpeace quotes senior Solvay managers admitting that PVC
- recycling is not feasible.
-
- "The PVC industry would have us believe that their product is
- essential for modern life, but substitutes exist for all uses,"
- said Beverly Thorpe of Greenpeace International. "As the poison
- chlorine is being banned from use in products like CFCs or from
- use in paper bleaching, more and more is being dumped into PVC
- production. PVC is in effect a toxic waste in disguise".
-