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Keywords
Air pollution
Chimneys
Climate (campaign title)
Coal
Coal-fired power stations
Day
Electricity pylons
Industrial landscapes
Industrial structures
KWCI (GPI)
Outdoors
Pollution
Smoke
Toxics (campaign title)
Xuanwei Power Station in China
Emissions and waste water from the state-owned Xuanwei Power Station in Xuanwei, Yunnan province, have greatly damaged local people’s health. High concentrations of nitrates in the water have been linked to high incidences of cancer in the area. The power plant’s coal ash disposal site is in Hongqiaopu village, about 3km away. The road between is heavily trafficked with huge trucks carrying coal ash to the dump, at a rate of about two to three trucks per every 10 minutes. The workers have absolutely no protective gear, leaving them in close contact with the hazardous fine particles of coal ash for long hours every day. The impact on their health is huge.
Unique identifier:
GP026HI
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
11/07/2010
Locations:
Asia
,
China
,
Yunnan Province
Credit line:
© Simon Lim / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)
Containers
Shoot:
Coal Ash Disposal Documentation in China
The threats of coal combustion waste have been vastly underestimated in China due to regulatory loopholes that allow power companies to freely dump toxic coal ash in the environment, according to Greenpeace’s latest report, the True Cost of Coal – An Investigation into Coal Ash in China.
Related Collections:
Report 'True Cost of Coal: China Coal Ash'
Climate Report 'Point of No Return'
Coal Ash Disposal Documentation in China (Photo & Video)
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