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Posted By Becky Allen
Dear all,
I wondered if anyone saw the following article in the Sunday Telegraph (13/01/01). I'm writing a small piece on it for OHR, if anyone would like to comment on it they can contact me at becky.allen@irseclipse.co.uk
Regards,
Becky Allen
Journalist, OHR, 18-20 Highbury Place, London N5 1QP, tel: 020 7354 6786
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Christopher Booker's Notebook
(Filed: 13/01/2002)
Billions to be spent on nonexistent risk
THANKS to a decision by officials in Brussels and Britain to confuse two totally different chemicals sharing the common name "asbestos", Britain will soon face a wholly unnecessary bill running into tens of billions of pounds.
Everyone knows that "asbestos" is a highly dangerous product, which it is officially claimed will kill 250,000 people in the European Union in the next 35 years.
This is why the Health and Safety Executive now wants to issue a new law imposing on property owners all sorts of costly requirements that even the HSE admits will cost £8 billion, just for surveying and monitoring.
What is less well known is that there are two quite different chemicals lumped together under the name "asbestos", so that 85 per cent or more of this expenditure will be directed at a product that poses no risk to human health and is chemically identical to talcum powder.
Furthermore, the highly alarmist projections of deaths are based on a study that unwittingly confused the two chemicals.
And although scientific studies commssioned by the HSE itself brought this confusion to light, EU and HSE officials - unlike their US counterparts - have refused to alter their policy.
It was in the 1950s that scientists including Professor Richard Doll, who first linked cancer with tobacco-smoking, discovered that "blue" and "brown" asbestos, with its sharp, metallic fibres of iron silicate, is a killer, causing a range of lung diseases and cancer.
But by one of the most unfortunate sleights of hand in scientific history, this demonisation was extended to include "white" or chrysotile asbestos, magnesium silicate, just because it shares the same name.
The silky fibres of white asbestos are used in a huge variety of products, from cement roofing slates and tiles to ironing boards and cookers.
It also occurs naturally in the air, so that we each have an average two million asbestos particles in our lungs, adding 20,000 a day.
Until the 1980s, legislation recognised the difference between the two asbestos types.
But a report by Professor Julian Peto of the Institute of Cancer Research, based on workers at a Rochdale textile factory, seemed to show that white asbestos was just as dangerous as the blue and brown variety.
A series of Brussels directives lumped the two together. Since then this has driven UK policy and law, and official projections of the asbestos-related death rate, claiming 3,000 deaths a year, are based on figures from Peto and Doll.
It is astonishing, however, that the HSE itself subsequently commissioned other studies, such as those by Dr Alan Gibbs and Professor F Pooley, which show that Peto misread the evidence, and that residues in the workers' lungs that he studied came from blue and brown asbestos.
Further internal HSE studies, including a paper by John Hodgson and Andrew Darnton in 2000, concluded that the risk from white asbestos is "virtually zero".
Yet despite all this disproof, the HSE has not changed its policy. This is partly because it cannot defy EU law, and partly because there is now a very powerful lobby representing commercial and consultancy interests, which stand to make billions of pounds from surveys and from replacing white asbestos with products such as cellulose that may well pose a greater health risk.
Already householders are being told that they cannot sell their properties unless they replace asbestos cement products at a cost of thousands of pounds.
The one professional expert in Britain who has tried to shout about this is John Bridle, based in south Wales, now UK scientific spokesman for the Asbestos Cement Product Producers Association, which covers producers in 17 countries.
Mr Bridle, who is anxious to advise any firm with an asbestos problem via jbridle@whiteasbestos.fsnet. co.uk, is particularly alarmed by the wildly unscientific claims made in the growing number of asbestos-related court cases, and even more the new regulations proposed by the HSE, which will require every non-domestic property owner to pay for expensive surveys and monitoring of their premises.
This, the HSE estimates, will cost £8 billion, apart from the far greater cost of replacing asbestos ruled to be "dangerous".
In the 1980s the US Environmental Protection Agency went down this same track until, in 1992, a senior US court dismissed evidence based on the Peto report, ruling that more people are likely to "die from inhalation of toothpicks than from white asbestos fibres".
That is why, when 40 tonnes of white asbestos were released by the collapse of the World Trade Centre, the EPA advised that this posed no danger. In Britain we are still in thrall to one of the craziest health scares on record, and we are all about to pay the price: tens of billions of pounds.
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