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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Alcoa Australia admits cancer dangers
By Margaret Rees
15 January 2000
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Alcoa Australia publicly notified 3,000 former and present
permanent workers in December that research results from Canada
indicated that aluminium smelter workers face an increased risk
of lung or bladder cancer if they had high exposure to coal tar
pitch during their working lives. Alcoa has smelters at Point
Henry, Geelong and Portland, both in Victoria, where coal tar
pitch is combined with petroleum coke and baked at high temperatures
to make anodes and cathodes used in smelting aluminium.
Eighteen permanent workers were not contacted, nor were those
who worked for contractors. Trade unions estimate there could
be 2,000 contractors potentially affected. The letter to employees
admitted that the danger particularly applied to workers in anode
forming, anode baking, anode rodding, potlining, pot starting
and maintenance activities in the Electrode area. Besides breathing
in the pitch, workers could have absorbed it through the skin
or ingested it through the mouth as a result of eating or smoking.
The letter did not explain why the company had waited five
years before informing workers of the results of the 1995 study
of Alcan employees at the Arvida smelter in Quebec. It said Alcoa
worldwide had voluntarily reduced its workplace exposure limits
to "one quarter of those currently required by the National
Occupational Health and Safety Commission (Worksafe Australia)".
The NOHSC limit is 0.2 milligrams of coal tar pitch per cubic
metre of air, and Alcoa has adopted a standard of 0.05 milligrams.
The Australian Workers Union (AWU) wants the level reduced to
0.01 milligrams, as there are no totally safe levels for carcinogenic
fumes.
The letter claimed that Alcoa's two smelters have lower exposure
levels than the Canadian plant, which uses Soderberg technology.
Yet no mention was made of the fact that before 1990, Alcoa used
a much more dangerous form of coal tar pitch than the paste form
now used. Modern pre-bake plants emit less than 0.01 kilograms
of emissions per tonne of aluminium. Alcoa introduced this method
because it produced a higher output of aluminium, not because
it was safer.
Without admitting any liability, the Alcoa letter advised workers
who had been exposed for more than a year to seek medical tests
for bladder cancer. It acknowledged that no early detection test
for lung cancer exists. Further, it claimed that for the past
20 years Point Henry workers had been made well aware of the risks
of coal tar pitch "and have managed and handled the material
accordingly with respiratory protection, use of protective clothing
and barrier creams to minimise skin contact, and routine laundering
of clothes."
One former Alcoa worker Bill Aitken told the Melbourne Age
that the mouth masks and protective cream were an inadequate defence
against the clouds of coal tar dust. "The cream sweated off
within minutes and you had a mask but the rest of your face and
head caught the dust. You were breathing it, you were eating it."
He described the filthy conditions: "You came out black as
the ace of spades at night. When you went on holiday you'd still
be staining your best shirt for weeks." Exposure to the pitch
rendered the workers susceptible to sunburn.
Alcoa's letter also referred to studies from Monash University
in Victoria and the University of Western Australia, claiming
that preliminary results from these studies reveal cancer rates
in Alcoa workers no worse than in the general population. In fact
the smelter workers covered in the Monash study were only those
working since 1983, the year Victoria began to record all cancer
cases, yet the Point Henry smelter operated from 1963. AWU national
health officer Yossi Berger said the danger period for coal tar
pitch was between 1960 and 1990, when there was considerably reduced
regulation of fumes.
Alcoa did not mention paying for the tests and treatments that
workers have to undergo. The unions have entered into negotiations
with the company, and to date it has agreed to pay for the first
round of medical tests. That is, it will cover the gap between
WorkCover (workers' compensation) payments and the cost of tests.
The unions are asking for payment for medical tests and treatment
for all Alcoa staff and contractors.
Alcoa sent the workers a fact sheet to give to their private
physicians. This sheet also claimed that for the past 20 years
employees had been made well aware of the risks, and had lower
levels of exposure than the Canadian workers. It stated: "For
example, if your patient worked in direct contact with coal tar
pitch for 10 years, and the rest of the time worked in less exposed
jobs, the risk may be as low as a quarter of the maximum risk."
This is playing down the potential dangers as much as possible.
Such calculations of risk are based on average figures, and omit
the dangers of transient bursts, giving intermittent higher exposures.
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU) organiser for
Geelong, Chris Spindler, said the company is keeping its records
on workers who have contracted cancer, as well as internal health
checks, confidential. Furthermore, it has rejected union demands
that it place advertisements in national daily newspapers to alert
former contractors.
But the union's criticisms come after the fact. It is striking
that it was the company that made public the results of the five-year-old
Canadian research, not the union, which has carried out no major
campaign over the health dangers confronting aluminium workers.
After a brief flurry, media coverage of the issue has ceased.
Likewise, politicians have attempted to present Alcoa in a good
light. In a revealing comment in state parliament, Ian Tresize,
the Labor member for Geelong, congratulated Alcoa for being the
first employer to warn employees and for ensuring that workers
wear protective safety masks. Tresize requested that the minister
responsible for workers compensation refer the matter to the NOHSC.
Equally respectful to Alcoa, Local Government and WorkCover
Minister, Bob Cameron, replied that his office had drafted a letter
to the NOHSC asking for a national response. He stated that with
four smelters located outside Victoria, a national register must
be established. He said he had ordered the Victorian WorkCover
Authority to enter into discussions with Alcoa to see how it may
assist the NOHSC with any necessary work.
Alcoa's relationship with both Labor and Liberal state governments
has been extremely cordial since it invested in Victoria. In 1984
the Cain Labor government struck an electricity supply deal with
the company that cost taxpayers $1.2 billion in subsidies pegged
to the world price of aluminium.
Today the company is not concerned by parliamentary scrutiny.
Chairman of the Aluminium Company of America (Alcoa) Paul H. O'Neill
stated in a recent interview with the magazine Aluminium Today:
"I don't see environmental issues as a negative for aluminium
or Alcoa, they are our friend. As long as legislatures and governing
bodies don't do stupid things, we'll be fine."
Paul Johnson, a Point Henry worker, told the WSWS: "I
have worked at Alcoa for 14 years, and during my apprenticeship
we worked in every area of the plant, so I've worked with coal
tar pitch, but only for a short period. Without a doubt the exposure
was there earlier. I work on permanent afternoon shift with one
other bloke. Thirty-five years ago he started as a production
workerhe's since become a tradesman. When he started, they
shovelled up the pitch by hand with shovels, and the air was black
with it. The workers didn't wear any protection most of the time.
"Alcoa has provided fairly good respiratory protection
for about the last six years, but before [that] there were just
masks. Now there is positive air displacementthe worker
wears a helmet and it blows fresh air from a filter pack on his
back or on his belt, and there is a battery pack. But workers
don't always wear them, because they slow you down, and when there
is a push for more production, it is easier not to wear them.
"Alcoa has admitted the risks about cancer, but is trying
to contain the panic. A few people I know have wondered why Alcoa
came out publicly. I think the reason is that from the company
perspective it is the best way to proceed. It makes it look like
they're proactive; it looks like they're an upstanding corporate
citizen. The public will think Alcoa is a good company. From the
company point of view, Alcoa knows this is going to come out eventuallyit's
inevitable, so better that they say it first. They've taken a
profit estimation that it will cost them less in the long run.
"One thing about Alcoa at Point Henry in the last 14 years
is that they have played it very hard about their public image.
That is all it isimage. They go and plant some trees outside,
while meanwhile they rip out all the bush in Western Australia
and leave behind devastation.
"As for contract workers, Alcoa hasn't notified contract
workers at all. The company only has records since 1983. The real
test of the unions will be when this gets further down the road,
when it becomes clear how many workers have cancer. What will
be the unions' position then? Alcoa has made excellent profits
all this time. Are the unions going to challenge the company's
profits? When will we get down to the truth?"
See Also:
Workers and residents
in Western Australia suffer health problems from Alcoa's alumina
plant
[11 November 1999]
Cancer
and Industrial Pollution
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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