by James Card, Environmental News Service
CHANGWON, South Korea-- The South Korean government
has promised to establish dioxin regulations by the end of this
year after studies are done to determine if dioxins are dangerous
to humans. Dioxins are a group of 75 chemically related chemicals
classified by the World Health Organization as damaging persistent
organic pollutants. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers
them as human carcinogens, but in South Korea, dioxins are not
officially proven to be harmful.
Although the status of dioxins is in a grey area, South Korea
has previously written regulations to restrict their discharge.
In 1999, South Korea joined the Stockholm Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants (POPs), which governs the emission of the dirty
dozen - dioxins and 11 other chemicals.
Dioxins are an unwanted by-product of manufacturing. Pulp mills,
chemical plants and smelting facilities are common emitters, while
solid waste incinerators release the greatest amount of dioxins
into the environment. One component of the waste burned in these
incinerators is polyvinyl chloride plastics, and when chlorine
based plastics are burned at too low a temperature, dioxins are
emitted.
In January 2001, medium and large solid waste incinerators became
subject to monitoring by the Korean Ministry of the Environment.
In addition, numerous government agencies have conducted dioxin
research, but their results have not yet been combined to create
a database that would allow for comprehensive policy making on
dioxin issues.
In South Korea concern focuses on dioxins as airborne and waterborne
pollutants. When released, some dioxins are broken down by sunlight,
some evaporate to air, but most attach to soil and settle to the
bottom sediment in water.
Dioxin concentrations may build up in the food chain, resulting
in measurable levels in animals. An estimated 90 percent of human
dioxin intake is through food sources.
Chronic exposure to dioxins can lead to weakening of the immune
system, skin diseases, infertility, cancer, and endocrine disruption.
In April 2005, the first public report about dioxin pollution
from the steel industry was released by the state-run National
Institute of Environmental Research (NIER). It revealed that two
steelyards of Pohang Iron & Steel Co., Ltd., or Posco, one
of South Korea’s most profitable corporations, emitted pollutants
at rates 6,000 times higher than those released by the country’s
biggest waste incinerator.
The Ministry of Environment researched the issue of dioxins emitted
from the steelyards in 2002, but the results were not disclosed
for reasons of corporate privacy.
The NIER report was inconclusive, stating that local laws governing
dioxin emissions do not exist and they were unable to prove that
the discharge of steelyard dioxin is a risk to health. More research
was called for, along with standards to lower dioxin levels.
At the Gwangyang steelyard, a brown haze perpetually hangs over
the area and a patina of black dust collects on neighborhood windowsills
hours after they are wiped clean. In September 2004, Seoul National
University researchers discovered that residents of Gwangyang
have bronchial infections at a rate five times greater than the
national average.
Many Gwangyang children are plagued with "ah-toe-pi,”
the Korean word for atopic dermatitis, or eczema, a skin inflammation.
The most noted health effect in people exposed to large amounts
of one dioxin - 2,3,7,8-TCDD - is chloracne, a severe skin disease
with acne-like lesions that occur mainly on the face and upper
body. Other skin effects noted in people exposed to high doses
of this dioxin include skin rashes and discoloration, according
to the U.S. federal Agency for Toxic Substances.
In Pohang, home of the other Posco steelyard, the Korean Ocean
Research and Development Institute studied mussels in the nearby
coastal areas. The level of dioxin extracted from the mussels
was the highest in the nation. By the Institute's estimation,
if a person consumed three or four mussels per day, that person
would ingest dioxins in excess of the World Health Organization's
recommended maximum intake of four trillionths of a gram per day
per kilogram of bodyweight.
In 2003, the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry reported
of a waste removal crisis. Of the country’s 232 landfills,
half were ordered to close over a five year period because they
were filled to overflowing.
That year, the Ministry of the Environment approved the construction
of more municipal solid waste incinerators and declared that its
waste disposal policy favored incineration over landfills. Ministry
official Kang Sok-jae said, “We are aiming to double the
percentage of incinerated waste to 30 percent by the year 2011.”
The construction of municipal incinerators is partially subsidized
by the national government. Private companies bid for their construction
and management. All together they are nicknamed the “Incineration
Cartel” by environmental groups.
In 2002, the Citizens' Institute for Environment Studies took
blood samples from residents living near waste incinerators in
Pyeongtaek in the Gyeongii Province. The survey concluded that
if the sampled residents are representative of the province, then
people of the Gyeonggi area would have some of the highest dioxin
levels in the world.
The incineration boom has not gone unnoticed and many Korean
citizens are concerned about dioxin exposure. In many cities,
civic groups have rallied and have pressured politicians not to
build incinerators in their neighborhoods, invoking a not-in-my-backyard
position.
In 2001, the Seoul government continued with their plan to build
incinerators in the districts of Mapo, Gangnam, Yangcheon, and
Nowon despite the protests and rallies of residents and environmental
groups. Incinerator construction plans in the cities of Gyeongju
and Busan were blocked successfully by citizens.
Some of the older incinerators use obsolete Japanese technology
that emit more dioxins than the newer ones. In the last three
decades, other industrialized nations created environmental policies
that lowered the use of incinerators and dioxin emissions. So,
incinerator manufacturers targeted foreign markets where public
awareness about incinerator generated dioxin was limited or nonexistent.
By the 1990s, South Korea had become a dumping ground for over
13,000 small scale incinerators that discharge 20 to 30 times
more dioxin than larger ones.
In 1998, there were 14,791 incinerators across the country and
95 percent were small capacity incinerators that are estimated
to produce 52 percent of total dioxin emissions in South Korea.
The government sponsored incinerators and heavy industries are
not the only dioxin emitters - burning agricultural plastics contributes
to the country's dioxin burden.
Covering the Korean countryside are tunnel-like seasonal greenhouses
that extend across the limited flatlands. Used to mitigate the
weather fluctuations and optimize plant growth, the greenhouses
are made of polyvinyl chloride film. Once worn or torn, the agricultural
plastics are burned and produce a thick, black smoke, laden with
dioxins. Although local regulations addressing this pollution
exist, enforcement is uncommon or nonexistent.
Critics say the South Korean government is in the Dark Ages when
it comes to regulating dioxin levels. But after the promised government
studies are completed, South Korean residents may gain some insight
into the risks of dioxin emissions