With a 56% rise in lung cancer rates in a mere nine years, it can't be argued that the air quality in most of China is bad for you. Horror stories have trickled out of the mainland, but none quite like the latest: an eight year girl being treated for lung cancer. Proof, if proof were needed, that living next to a busy main road in Jiangsu and spending most of your time breathing in air that only slightly cleaner than an airport smoking lounge is actually not helping your lungs.
Politicians in the country have been adamant about blaming other things, from the Chinese "style" of cooking to the exhaust fumes of the millions of cars on the road - in fact anything that didn't include factories and coal fired electricity generators.
At the end of last month, Fang Li, deputy head of the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau said "Beijing is an open city. All social forces will be mobilized and international advanced technologies and enterprises are welcome," when he announced that the city plans to invest 1 trillion RMB into cleaning up the air. Whether those plans involve punishing factories that illegally pollute and routinely escape punishment because of the guanxi that their CEO has is another matter entirely.
Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
CCDCP Report: Huaihe River River Pollution Doubles Cancer Rate
Villagers in Shenqiu have twice the national cancer rate, and many who finally go to hospital are in the final, terminal stages of the disease. In 2010, toxic chemicals dumped in the rive caused 1,724 lives, and the mortality rate for lung cancer victims amongst women is 20 times that of 1973. The majority of those who visit a hospital typically have about three months left to live.
Environmental protection officers who declined to be named admitted that the health or environmental concerns weren't considered, and the goal was to become as profitable as possible in the early days of China's economic reform. A report was released today on the quality of the water in the river by Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, saying that it will take at least 10 years for cancer rates to fall back in line with the national average.
Environmental protection officers who declined to be named admitted that the health or environmental concerns weren't considered, and the goal was to become as profitable as possible in the early days of China's economic reform. A report was released today on the quality of the water in the river by Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, saying that it will take at least 10 years for cancer rates to fall back in line with the national average.
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