Presentation 2
Presentation 2
Presentation 2
BY GROUP T1
Introduction
On March 2001, HLL caught redhanded by the residents of Kodaikanal, when they found a dumpsite with toxic mercury-laced waste from the companys thermometer factory 32000 potentially affected people lived in Kodaikanal
Disposal of mercury of an ongoing saga of Such an exposure marked the beginning Protests staged by contamination waste along dishonesty, by Unilevers Indian subsidiary, Hindustan Lever Ltd residents led by with broken thermometer NGO including Greenpeace and ground glass
Symptoms reported by ex workers were fatigue, headaches, nausea, blurred vision, respiratory disorders, central nervous system problems
7.4 ton of crushed mercury containing glass was spilled in a busy scrap yard located near a school
WASTE DISPOSAL PROCEDURES Glass scrap was sent for recycling to glass merchants and glass containing mercury treated to recover the mercury. Remaining waste was sold to recyclers unlawfully and in breach of companys policies Water from the plant was led to effluent treatment plant and sludge stored in the pit on site under cover Factory buried glass scrap on the site after appropriate regulatory approvals.
HLLs response to the complaints was transparent and the persons responsible for breach were indentified & penalized
Manufacturing operations were suspended on March 2001 & glass scrap yard was shifted to a more secure place An environmental audit was commissioned by HLL
It appointed Well-known URS Dames & Moore of Aus to conduct a detailed environmental audit
The result showed that 300 kg of mercury was disposed to the Pambar Sholas Forest and another 700 kg of waste through air
Role of NGO
The NGOs left no stones unturned to mobilize public opinion and to pressure TNPCB and the TN government to compel HLL to make amends for its acts of commission and omission in unlawful disposal of the hazardous toxic waste and in the exposure of workers to potentially dangerous work environment
The NGOs were also responsible to form the TN alliance against mercury (TAAM), which tried to identify and contain contaminated soil
The NGOs were also behind the former workers approaching the supreme court of India in 2005, demanding compensation from HLL for loss of their jobs and health hazards the suffered
The most laudable part of NGOs role is the novel and dramatic manner in which the kept they mercury waste spill issue alive throughout, by using a variegated set of measures available to them.