It’s no secret that Australia is a country of renovators. Each month more than a billion dollars is spent sprucing up homes with additions that include shiny new kitchens and bathrooms. But what’s not well known is that many of the young tradies who cut up the engineered stone to make the benches and vanities so desired by renovators have actually been handed a death sentence. That’s because these man-made products contain silica, and its dust, when inhaled, is a killer. In fact, over time it’s considered to be as toxic as asbestos. In a joint investigation by 60 MINUTES, The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, Adele Ferguson reveals video proof of repeated safety breaches in Australian workplaces where tradies have been tasked with cutting and grinding the engineered stone into shape. Equally concerning, Ferguson’s report contains damning evidence that while the affected workers say they have been unaware of the dangers, it’s certainly not the case when it comes to the manufacturers of these products.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCVCOWejlag
Jun 6, 2014
The blowout preventer that was intended to shut off the flow of high-pressure oil and gas from the Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico during the disaster on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig on April 20, 2010, failed to seal the well because drill pipe buckled for reasons the offshore drilling industry remains largely unaware of.
Four months after the BP oil spill, Stephen Fry returns to America's Deep South together with zoologist Mark Carwardine, to see what the impact has been.