Toxic
Factories Take Toll
On
China
's Labor Force
By
JANE SPENCER and JULIET YE
January 15,
2008; Page A1
Over
the holidays, millions of American children received
Chinese-made toys powered by cadmium batteries.
Cadmium
batteries are safe to use. They are also cheap, saving American
parents about $1.50 on the average toy, compared with pricier
batteries.
But
cadmium batteries can be hazardous to make. In southern
China
, Wang Fengping worked for years in plants that produced cadmium
batteries for the likes of Mattel Inc., Toys "R" Us
Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Like hundreds of her colleagues,
Ms. Wang regularly inhaled the toxic red cadmium dust that
filled the air in the plant.
Now,
at 45, Ms. Wang is often too weak to walk. Her kidneys have
failed, and her doctors have identified cadmium poisoning as the
likely culprit. About 400 other workers at her former employer,
Hong Kong-based GP Batteries International Ltd., have been found
to harbor unsafe levels of cadmium, a toxic metal like mercury
and lead that can cause kidney failure, lung cancer and bone
disease.
In
recent months, Americans have discovered the dark side of their
reliance on cheap Chinese goods. From lead-tainted toys to
contaminated pet food, the safety of Chinese products is
suddenly an American obsession.
But
in
China
, workers making goods for American consumers have long borne
the brunt of a global manufacturing system that puts cost
cutting ahead of safety. The search for cheaper production means
dirty industries are migrating to countries with few worker
protections and lenient regulatory environments.
The
nickel-cadmium battery illustrates this trend. Once widely
manufactured in the West, the batteries are now largely made in
China
, where the industry is sickening workers and poisoning the soil
and water.
Now,
some regulators and companies are taking action. This year, the
European Union is banning the sale of nearly all cadmium
batteries. A few companies, including Hasbro Inc., are eschewing
the battery.
Yet
cadmium batteries, a technology dating back to 1899, continue to
represent 3% of total battery sales, and are still widely used
in toys, power tools, cordless phones and other gadgets sold in
the
U.S.
Besides being inexpensive, they can provide a quick surge of
power.
The
near-disappearance of the American cadmium-battery industry can
be understood from a visit to an overgrown field in
Cold Spring
,
N.Y.
Here, the Marathon Battery factory churned out nickel-cadmium
batteries for the
U.S.
military for three decades. After the plant was shuttered in
1979, the cadmium-laden ground became one of the nation's
highest-profile superfund sites, sparking a $130 million
clean-up and a class-action lawsuit by nearby residents that was
settled for millions of dollars in 1998.
POISONED
WORDS
Edited
excerpts from Ms. Wang's blog, written in Chinese and translated
by The Wall Street Journal. Click on the image to go to the blog
itself.
• From
the blog's undated introduction
Hello friends! Do you want to know how Gold Peak Battery treats
its cadmium-poisoned employees? Would you like to hear a
personal account from a victim of workplace cadmium poisoning?
Panasonic Battery and past and present battery factory workers,
would you like to know more specific facts? Then please read my
blog, and let's unite in concern for cadmium poisoning!
• Nov.
20, 2007 -- Global warming, colder heart
It was hard to get up to eat a bit of breakfast, my head hurt
and my whole body felt discomfort, but finally I decided to go
outside. Everyone is talking about global warming, temperatures
are rising, but today I felt the wind was pretty strong and the
temperature colder than yesterday. I felt as if I was
sleepwalking through unfamiliar streets. After a while, I
gathered my thoughts and returned home.
• Nov.
11, 2007 -- The visible and the invisible
Our society is full of love; if a person gets into trouble,
others will help. But when it comes to occupational diseases --
a hidden killer -- that cannot be seen, I'm afraid that it's
very difficult for those without personal experience to
understand. Most workers have limited knowledge, ultimately you
don't know how many hidden killers are in your workplace. The
boss knows, but he won't tell you!
• Nov.
11, 2007 -- First application for an occupational illness
diagnosis
My name is Wang Fengping. I am an engineer in the engineering
department of the Gold Peak Battery Factory in Huizhou city,
Guandong province. I was born in May 1962 and began work at
Gold
Peak
on August 1, 1995. From that date until December 2005, I was
continuously engaged in the production and follow-up design of
manufacturing equipment and machinery. This
entry includes an account of all of Ms. Wang's jobs, workplaces,
names of co-workers, and whether those employees had symptoms
similar to Ms. Wang's.
• Nov,
7, 2007 -- Poem, in Chinese and English
"It is my prayer, it is my longing, that we may pass from
this life together / a longing which shall never perish from the
earth, / but shall have place in the heart of every wife that
loves, / until the end of the time; and it shall be called by my
name."
As
the
U.S.
and other Western nations tightened their regulation of cadmium,
production of nickel-cadmium batteries moved to less-developed
countries, most of it eventually winding up in
China
. "Everything was transferred to
China
because no one wanted to deal with the waste from cadmium,"
says Josef Daniel-Ivad, vice president for research and
development at Pure Energy Visions, an
Ontario
battery company.
Today,
only two American companies still make cadmium batteries, and
they specialize in high-end batteries for use in equipment such
as aircraft engines.
U.S.
laws require them to follow strict guidelines on worker safety
and environmental protection.
In
China
, government standards on cadmium exposure are in line with
those endorsed by the World Health Organization. And without
question, there are safe cadmium plants in
China
.
But
having rules and enforcing them are two different things.
China
has dozens of so-called "hot spots" where the cadmium
contamination is similar to levels at
U.S.
superfund sites. More that 10% of
China
's arable land is contaminated with heavy metals such as
cadmium, according to the State Environmental Protection Agency,
and the metals are entering
China
's food supply. At least a dozen academic studies in the past
two years have found unsafe levels of cadmium in fruit and
vegetables grown in Chinese soil. In a study published last
year, researchers at the Guangdong Institute of Ecology found
excessive levels of cadmium in Chinese cabbage grown in Foshan.
The battery industry isn't the only source of environmental
cadmium contamination in
China
, but it is a major contributor.
Often,
these risks extend to workers. Last year, at least 20 workers at
a Panasonic Corp. cadmium-battery plant in
Wuxi
were found to have elevated levels of the toxin, and two were
diagnosed as poisoned. In 2005, 1,000 workers at Huanyu Power
Source Co., based in
Xinxiang
,
Henan
, were also found with cadmium exposure. Both Panasonic and
Huanyu say they have taken care of the affected workers,
providing health care and compensation exceeding the
requirements of Chinese law.
Yet
these findings didn't necessarily result from corporate or
government vigilance. The Panasonic-plant contamination, for
instance, came to light after some workers watched a television
show about cadmium poisoning -- and got themselves tested.
Protest
about contamination at the GP plants has persisted in part
because of the determination of Ms. Wang, a GP engineer, to
publicize the matter.
Born
into a relatively well-off family, Ms. Wang attended university
and obtained an engineering degree before hiring on at a newly
opened GP factory in the southern Chinese city of
Huizhou
, a fast-growing center of
China
's electronics industry. The year was 1995, and GP Batteries, a
Singapore-listed unit of
Hong
Kong-listed
Gold
Peak
Industries (Holdings) Ltd. Huizhou, was a prestigious employer,
eventually becoming one of the largest makers of nickel-cadmium
batteries in
China
.
As
a machine designer, Ms. Wang worked in the management offices of
a walled compound of pink-tiled buildings where some 1,500 women
in matching blue smocks worked 12-hour days assembling
nickel-cadmium battery packs for toys and other products. GP's
clients eventually came to include dozens of U.S. companies
including Energizer Battery Co., Proctor & Gamble Co.'s
Duracell, Spectrum Brands Inc.'s Ray-O-Vac, Hasbro, Mattel,
Wal-Mart and Toys "R" Us.
For
years, factory workers complained about illnesses -- nausea,
hair loss and exhaustion, for instance. But GP management says
it wasn't aware of the extent of the cadmium danger. "We
knew it was dangerous, but we thought that if it was handled in
a reasonable manner you should be OK," says Henry Leung,
chief operating officer of GP Batteries. "This is all new
for
China
."
At
the factory, Ms. Wang spent the bulk of her time in an office,
quietly sketching machine designs. But between 2002 and 2004,
she spent long hours in production areas, inhaling cadmium dust,
according to a lawsuit filed by Ms. Wang against the factory.
In
2003, some sick workers paid for their own tests at an
occupational-disease hospital and learned they had elevated
cadmium levels. The news touched off panic on the factory floor,
and workers demanded the company pay for cadmium tests. Hundreds
of workers eventually went on strike.
GP
says it began paying for cadmium checkups in mid-2004, as soon
as the region set up facilities that could handle large volumes
of cadmium testing. In the initial tests, 177 workers showed
levels of cadmium above
China
's safe-exposure limit, and two qualified as poisoned. Dozens
were immediately hospitalized.
Cadmium
affects people in radically different ways, so many GP workers
with elevated levels aren't sick, but may become so in the years
ahead.
Roughly
900 workers quit their jobs, and GP offered cadmium-affected
workers one-time exit compensation starting at about $500. GP
says the average package was $2,100. Many workers say the
compensation failed to cover their medical bills.
GP
says it has paid out more than $1 million in compensation and
medical care for affected workers and has exceeded the legal
requirements. "We want to take care of workers," says
GP's Mr. Leung, but he says some workers are feigning sickness
to obtain money. "They want to be recorded as poisoned, so
people will keep giving them compensation," he says.
Ms.
Wang watched on the sidelines as the bitter saga unfolded at her
factory. During her nine years at the factory, she rarely had
contact with rank-and-file workers, and her $540 weekly salary
was nearly triple what they earned. While other workers ate in a
cafeteria, Ms. Wang sat in a manager's dining room with table
cloths and porcelain dishes.
But
in October of 2004, when GP first paid for companywide cadmium
tests, Ms. Wang's result came back showing cadmium levels above
the safe-exposure limit set by the Chinese government. However,
to qualify for continuing monitoring,
China
's occupational-disease laws require two consecutive positive
tests. A second test showed Ms. Wang's cadmium level in the
normal range, disqualifying her for assistance.
Three
occupational-medicine doctors -- in
London
,
Sweden
and the
U.S.
-- who reviewed Ms. Wang's medical records for The Wall Street
Journal say her initial test showed clear indications of kidney
damage, a marker of possible cadmium poisoning.
"There's
no doubt that in 2004, she had smoking-gun-type indicators of
kidney damage, and in a person who works with cadmium, that
should not be ignored," says Dr. Arch Carson, an expert in
occupational medicine and environmental sciences at the
University of Texas School of Public Health.
GP
says it relies on medical experts at government-run
occupational-disease hospitals in the nearby city of
Guangzhou
to determine if workers required monitoring.
Having
no symptoms, Ms. Wang continued playing badminton and jogging.
But in early 2006, she began to feel extremely weak, and
suffered headaches. Her skin began to age rapidly, and her eyes
became sunken hollows. In November 2006, Ms. Wang was diagnosed
at a local hospital with chronic renal failure that doctors said
would likely shorten her life.
On
Dec. 25, 2006, Ms. Wang approached GP management with news of
her diagnosis. She requested that GP send her to the
occupational-disease hospital in
Guangzhou
, which has facilities for treating cadmium exposure.
A
stalemate ensued. The company says it was willing to help, but
that Ms. Wang refused to follow local legal procedures. Local
laws required that Ms. Wang visit a local hospital first, in
order to be referred to the main occupational-disease hospital
in
Guangzhou
. The company says Ms. Wang demanded they send her directly to
the
Guangzhou
hospital, in violation of regulations.
In
May, Ms. Wang sued the factory for $400,000 in compensation and
medical care. To build her case, Ms. Wang used her access to
company computers to download files that showed other workers in
her department were exposed to cadmium. GP says there is no
evidence that Ms. Wang's illness is related to cadmium, and
doctors at the Guangzhou Occupational Disease Hospital say her
kidney failure doesn't meet the criteria for occupational
disease.
By
last summer, Ms. Wang's health was failing. According to medical
records from a hospital in
Nanjing
, she was admitted with a fever and a respiratory infection.
Doctors there treated her for chronic renal failure, and listed
"long-term exposure to cadmium-containing substances"
as a possible cause, according to her medical records.
As
workers, including Ms. Wang, sought to bring attention to the
issue, a public-relations battle erupted. In 2005, GP filed a
lawsuit against labor-rights groups representing the workers,
charging libel. The case is moving through
Hong Kong
courts.
On
their way to an interview with a Wall Street Journal reporter in
August, Ms. Wang and several colleagues were pulled over by
police and detained for nearly 13 hours in a Huizhou police
station, according to several sources familiar with the
incident. A person present at the Huizhou police station says
the workers were told they would be charged with treason if they
spoke to the media again. The Huizhou government says its police
detained no battery workers.
Ms.
Wang stopped answering her cellphone after the incident with the
Huizhou police. But she began writing a blog to advise victims
of cadmium poisoning. A recent post, in Chinese, said,
"Basically, occupational disease could be prevented but it
costs money. Money is the gold of bosses. And for them, the
lives of workers are worthless."
After
revelations of its cadmium-battery problems arose, GP quit
making them at its plants, and now outsources that production to
independent factories in
China
.
In
America
, five years after Hasbro stopped using nickel-cadmium
batteries, Mattel and Toys "R" Us are yet to follow
suit, but say they are exploring alternatives. Wal-Mart no
longer purchases cadmium batteries from GP but declined to
comment on whether it still uses them in its products.
Mattel
says cadmium batteries have some performance advantages over
alternatives, such as a better ability to retain a charge when
not used for long periods.
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Posted January 18, 2008 | 03:54 PM (EST)