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Ship breaking

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Ship breaking or ship demolition involves breaking up of ships for scrap. Image:Shipbreakingbangladesh2.jpg Image:Shipbreakingbangladesh.jpg

Until the late twentieth century, ship breaking took place in port cities in the "First World," including the United States. Today, however, most ship breaking yards are in developing nations, principally Bangladesh, China, and India, due to less stringent environmental regulations dealing with the disposal of lead paint and other toxic substances. However, there are a few "breakers" in the United States that still operate.

In recent years, ship breaking has become an issue of major environmental concern. Many ship breaking yards in developing nations have lax or no environmental controls, enabling large quantities of highly toxic materials to escape into the environment and causing serious health problems among shipbreakers and the local population. Environmental campaign groups such as Greenpeace have made the issue a high priority for their campaigns. <ref>Shipbreaking, Greenpeace, accessed 8.11.06</ref>

Currently many ships are also sunk to make artificial reefs after being cleaned up. A ship that has been scrapped is sometimes colloquially said to be "made into razor blades."

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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[edit] External reading

"The Outlaw Sea: Chaos and Crime on the World's Oceans". William Langewiesche, 2004, London: Granta Books. Contains an extensive section on the shipbreaking industry in India and Bangladesh.

  • www.claudiocambon.com - contains a photo essay about the last voyage, demolition, and recycling of an American merchant ship in Chittagong, Bangladesh done in 1998 by documentary photographer Claudio Cambon. Some of the photographs from this series illustrated William Langewiesche's original article about shipbreaking in the August 2000 Atlantic Monthly.
  • www.TheSchoolOfThought.com - contains one traveler's acount of visiting the shipbreaking yards of Chittagong.
Life Cycle of a Navy Ship
Service Life
Ship naming and launching | Ship commissioning | Ship decommissioning

After Decommissioning
Reserve fleet | Scrapping | Recycling | Scuttling or Weapons testing | Museum ship


Topics related to waste management edit
Anaerobic digestion | Composting | Incineration | Landfill | Mechanical biological treatment | Radioactive waste | Recycling | Sewerage | Waste | Waste collection | Waste sorting | Waste hierarchy | Waste management | Waste management concepts | Waste legislation | Waste treatment technology
de:Abwrackwerft

fr:Démolition navale ja:船舶解体 pl:Stocznia złomowa


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