Latest News for: world shipbreaking

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Labour leaders hail Pakistan ratifying Hong Kong shipbreaking convention

The News International 31 Dec 2023
It was said that a large number of these dying ships would reach the third largest shipbreaking yard of the world in Gadani in Balochistan about 40 kilometres northwest of Karachi. The shipbreaking ...
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International Shipbreaking LLC: Innovating With The Latest Robotics Technology

Texas Border Business 04 Dec 2023
Once the technology is fully developed and has been rigorously tested it will then be manufactured commercially and made available to shipbreaking companies around the world, helping to improve the ...
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Who are International Shipbreaking LLC?

The Maritime Executive 03 Nov 2023
In many parts of the world, shipbreaking is an industry in need of reform ... operation in the United States and we’re working hard to become the most advanced shipbreaking operation in the world."
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Circular economy exposition opens at center in Taipei

Taipei Times 19 Oct 2023
He said that he has seen discarded television screens in mountain heaps that threaten to overrun the Democratic Republis of the Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, and detritus from the world’s largest shipbreaking yard that ringed Chittagong in Bangladesh. .
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Watch: How shipping companies endorse inhumane working conditions in Bangladesh

SAFETY4SEA 02 Oct 2023
The International Labour Organization (ILO) has described shipbreaking as one of the world’s most dangerous jobs ... In Bangladesh, the life expectancy for men in the shipbreaking industry is 20 years lower than the average.
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Alarming… Nuclear contaminated ships being dumped in Bangladesh

Blitz 30 Sep 2023
have gained notoriety as one of the world’s largest shipbreaking yards. This area is not just a hub for shipbreaking but also fuels the South Asian country’s booming construction industry, providing it with a cheap source of steel.
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European companies dumping toxic ships on Bangladesh beaches, HRW says

Al Jazeera 28 Sep 2023
Bangladesh’s southeastern Sitakunda beaches have emerged as one of the world’s largest shipbreaking yards, fuelling the South Asian country’s booming construction industry and its need for cheap sources of steel.Keep reading.
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Bangladesh: Shipping Firms Profit from Labor Abuse

Human Rights Watch 28 Sep 2023
The International Labour Organization (ILO) has described shipbreaking as one of the world’s most dangerous jobs ... In Bangladesh, the life expectancy for men in the shipbreaking industry is 20 years lower than the average.
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HRW Says European Firms Ditching Toxic Ships on Bangladesh Beaches

Beijing News 28 Sep 2023
Bangladesh's southeastern Sitakunda beaches have emerged as one of the world's largest shipbreaking yards, fueling the South Asian country's booming construction industry and its need for cheap sources of steel.
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Trading Lives for Profit

Human Rights Watch 28 Sep 2023
The International Labour Organization (ILO) has described shipbreaking as one of the most dangerous jobs in the world ... I think shipbreaking is the most neglected industry in the world.
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Reissue Of The Week: Tom Waits' Island Trilogy

The Quietus 01 Sep 2023
One of the more revealing cliches of fantastical fiction is the rubbish dump world ... This is physically true, given how the West uses the so-called developing world, from electronic waste dumps in Ghana to the shipbreaking ports of India and Pakistan.
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NGO Shipbreaking Platform: The current conditions in Gadani after the explosion

SAFETY4SEA 12 Jun 2023
Firstly, the Pakistani shipbreaking industry is the third larges t in the world, after India and Bangladesh ... In 2019, Gadani shipbreaking industry was generating less than one fifth of the scrap it used to generate in the 1980s.
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Five headlines for Monday morning

Moosejaw Today 01 May 2023
1. Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week ... targetting shipbreaking operations.
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What oceans tell us about a changing world — in pictures

The Times/The Sunday Times 11 Nov 2022
Container ships have an average lifespan of 26 years and they are increasingly being brought ashore to be cleaned up at shipbreaking yards in the third world, such as in Chittagong, Bangladesh.
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