Tuesday, March 08, 2005

 

The Aberfan Effect

The Aberfan Effect


The Welsh village of Aberfan suffered one of the worst mining disasters when a huge slag heap at the edge of town collapsed and covered the local school killing 144 people, mostly children.


The pressures for enhanced profits caused short cuts to be taken disregarding environmental conditions. Warning signs of instability of the slag heaps were ignored. The surroundings were dotted with these mountains which was not only unsafe but unsightly.


Surprisingly after the disaster the local populace figured out a way to remove these eyesores, proving that this could have been done earlier and preventing the tragedy.


For all those years the populace lived with ugly mounds, when they could have been replaced by a pleasant surrounding.


You can read the offical account here.



Moral: Don't foul your own nest.


I call the failure to learn this lesson the Aberfan effect.


Don't the business and political leaders have to live in this world too?

Do they want their children raised in dangerous, polluted conditions?

What does the extra profit do them if they can't enjoy their surroundings?

Are they immune to environmental poisons like Arsenic in the drinking water and Mercury emissions from coal power plants?


Have we learned from this? Apparently not, here's a small list of
ongoing disasters:



The Berkeley Pit Copper Mine, Butte MT



Hudson River PCB Contamination


Hanford Nuclear Weapons Site



Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant




Mercury Emissions from Coal Power Plants





If you have a disaster or comments you would like to add email me at
robertdfeinman@netscape.net


Click here
to see all my essays in context.

Copyright © 2005 Robert D Feinman


Feel free to use the ideas, but the words are mine.

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