Malaysian Protest Against Australian Company Lynas Dumping Radioactive Waste There
.……..lower environmental standards in Malaysia and double standards from Lynas.
SALLEH: I’m very concerned that Lynas is taking advantage of the loopholes in our laws, and does not implement, what it’s supposed to implement in Australia, but use a different standard here in Malaysia…..the authorities have issued a licence to Ashton rare earth, [in Australia] prior to Lynas acquiring it. And I had a copy of that approval and then, I saw, how stringent they are……
SINGH: If it’s reasonably that good, why don’t they do the processing within Australia, why send it to Malaysia? it is a classic example of a polluting industry being exported to a developing country………
Demonstrators are planning to rally outside the Australian Embassy in Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpor on Friday. May 19, 2011, Radio Australia may 18 2011
They’ll be protesting against the Australian mining company Lynas and its plans to process rare earths in Pahang state. Local communities and environmental groups have raised concerns over the management of radioactive waste. They say the waste product thorium will affect fishing, tourism and public health .. while the Malaysian government has also asked for more information.
Reporter: Karon Snowdon
Speakers: Fuziah Salleh, People’s Justice Party MP; Gurmit Singh, engineer and advisor to the Environmental Protection Society of Malaysia; Nick Curtis, Chairman, Lynas group
SNOWDON: Rare earths are often said to be good for the environment. They make wind turbines, electric cars and low energy electric lights more efficient. They’re also used in computers and televisions. But the pollution associated with them is less consumer friendly. So when the Australian mining company Lynas Corporation decided to build a processing plant in Malaysia for its minerals from western australia, local people weren’t welcoming even though the government was.
Fuziah Salleh is a member of parliament for the oppositon People’s Justice Party. Her district of Kuantan on the east coast of Malaysia is the site of the 230 million dollar processing plant. She’s critical of what she says are lower environmental standards in Malaysia and double standards from Lynas.
SALLEH: I’m very concerned that Lynas is taking advantage of the loopholes in our laws, and does not implement, what it’s supposed to implement in Australia, but use a different standard here in Malaysia.
SNOWDON: We don’t have such plants here in Australia, so there’s nothing really, to measure against, I guess?
SALLEH: But the fact is that the authorities have issued a licence to Ashton rare earth, prior to Lynas acquiring it. And I had a copy of that approval and then, I saw, how stringent they are.
SNOWDON: So the Ashton plan proposed here in Australia had more stringent requirements than the one in Malaysia?
SALLEH: Yes, that’s what I’m saying………
Gurmit Singh is an engineer and advisor to the Environmental Protection Society of Malaysia.
SINGH: If it’s reasonably that good, why don’t they do the processing within Australia, why send it to Malaysia? it is a classic example of a polluting industry being exported to a developing country……..
Critics of the plant cite the problem of large amounts of low level radiactive thorium waste left from a Mitsubishi rare earth plant forced to close in 1992.
Gurmit Singh wants proof the Lynas operation will be safe.
SINGH: Five or six years ago, hoards of people, children being deformed, miscarriages happening and all that, these are all documented.
SNOWDON: That was 20 years ago, and one can assume the technology has improved since then?
SINGH: Ha ha, these assumptions are always very nebulous, because if the radiation is there, the radiation is there. The only argument is, what is the level of concentration of thorium, and this is where I think there’s a dispute going within the claims of Lynas and a report from the Australian parliament which claimed that the radiation levels of the concentration of thorium would be much higher than what Lynas is claiming.
……. SALLEH: We are a tourism town, where we have lots of tourists coming, we have beautiful beaches, we have seafood industry, we have fishing industry, and all of this will be affected, and they are very very near by the plant that’s going to be built…… http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/asiapac/stories/201105/s3221753.htm

It cannpot be safe, Mr Singh, because accidnts happen. Nor only for thorium232 alpha particles being released into the air in dust, and in water, but for the accidental release of highly toxic gases that are a by product, fluorine and sulphur dioxide, and the millions of gallons of waste water loaded with cadmium.
How will they clean the air? How will they clean the millios of gallons of cadmium contaminated water. They havent said!! Japan already had a cadmium disaster at Minamata. Does Malaysia need another one?
Further the experts who will evaluate this plant, said taht Fukushima was safe, even with NO protective wall around the cooling pumps, taht were destroyed by the tsunami. Other Japanes Nuke plants had built massive walls there, that saved them.
These same experts who told Thailand taht Nuke Plants are 100% safe, just before Fukushima blew its brains out.
They are part of the industry. They lie. Dont trust them!
Accidnts are nOT discussed by these experts!! They happen. Chernobyl, 3 Mile Island , USA, Sellafield UK, and a in Germany and France.
In the United States, very old laws still allow rare earth businesses to meet much less stringent standards for radioactivity in products and waste than other industries, precisely because… it is so hard to really handle these materials cleanly!!
The New York Times reported last October, that the tailings pond at Baotou, China is leaking an underground bloom of thorium that is moving toward the Yellow River at 300 meters per year; the river is 7 kilometers away. The Chinese have since confirmed this.
China’s rare earth industry each year produces more than five times the amount of waste gas, including deadly fluorine and sulfur dioxide, than the total flared annually by all miners and oil refiners in the U.S. Alongside that 13 billion cubic meters of gas comes 25 million tons of waste water laced with cancer-causing heavy metals such as cadmium.
Wake up Malaysia and say NO before they get a licnece, for after taht, it wil be TOO LATE.
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