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Where Do Old Tires Go?


FILE - Palestinian man Abdulrahman Al-Skafi, 54, rolls an old vehicle tire to make buckets out of it, in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank February 19, 2019. (REUTERS/Raneen Sawafta)
FILE - Palestinian man Abdulrahman Al-Skafi, 54, rolls an old vehicle tire to make buckets out of it, in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank February 19, 2019. (REUTERS/Raneen Sawafta)
Where Do Old Tires Go?
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Not long ago, Nabipur was a quiet farming village in northern India. Now the village is home to several large furnaces. They burn old tires from Western countries. The air is sometimes thick with smoke and the soil black with soot.

By burning tires, the furnaces produce a low-quality oil in a process known as pyrolysis.

Six years ago, there were no pyrolysis production centers in the village, about 110 kilometers south of New Delhi. Now Nabipur has at least 10 plants, with most operating at night to avoid inspection, some locals say.

“Used tires are not available locally, so they import from abroad,” said Shiva Choudhary, a businessman in Nabipur. “They clean their own country and dump their garbage on us.”

The Reuters news agency sent reporters to three small pyrolysis plants in the village.

At one, workers wore no safety equipment. Black soot covered their skin and clothes. The owner, Pankaj, said a trader sells him tires imported from overseas.

Villagers said they have suffered from breathing problems and eye and throat infections since the plants began expanding. Farmers say they have found black dust in their soil.

The Reuters news agency could not independently confirm the claims. It was also not possible to verify if the operations had a government permit to operate.

A demonstrator holds tires as he runs during a protest against Ecuador's President Lenin Moreno's austerity measures in Quito, Ecuador October 12, 2019. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado
A demonstrator holds tires as he runs during a protest against Ecuador's President Lenin Moreno's austerity measures in Quito, Ecuador October 12, 2019. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado


International trade

International trade in waste tires has almost doubled over the past five years, mainly to developing countries like India and Malaysia. This information comes from customs records provided to the United Nations.

Britain is currently the largest tire exporter, followed by Italy and the United States. India, responsible for 32% of all imports worldwide last year, is by far the biggest buyer.

The Basel Convention is an international agreement that governs trade in dangerous waste. The convention does not define tires as hazardous, meaning there are few restrictions on trading them.

In many countries, such as the United States, most old tires are placed in landfills, recycled or used as fuel in factories.

Pyrolysis supporters say the process can be a relatively clean way of disposing of tires and turning them into useful fuel. However, controlling pollution and processing waste can be costly and difficult to make profitable on a mass scale.

State-of-the-art plants can cost tens of millions of dollars. However, basic Chinese-made pyrolysis equipment can be purchased online for as little as $30,000.

At one plant Reuters visited in Malaysia, Bangladeshi immigrants
covered in dust put imported tires into a Chinese-made furnace. They
live in a small shelter next to the furnaces.

“People don’t know where old tires go,” said the owner, who gave his name only as Sam. “But if my factory doesn’t exist, where will the tires go?” He said he had a permit to operate. However, Reuters could not verify this.

FILE - Children ride on a swing made with an old tire at Nishi Rokugo Park, also known as the Tire Park, at Ota-Ku, in Tokyo, Japan August 17, 2017. The park was built with the concept of recycling by using thousands of old tires. (REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon)
FILE - Children ride on a swing made with an old tire at Nishi Rokugo Park, also known as the Tire Park, at Ota-Ku, in Tokyo, Japan August 17, 2017. The park was built with the concept of recycling by using thousands of old tires. (REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon)


Health risks

Burning tires can release numerous harmful chemicals and gases into the environment, as well as particulates, said Lalit Dandona. He heads the India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative, a research group studying health issues in India.

Dandona said short-term effects included skin irritation and lung infections. Longer exposure could result in heart attacks and lung cancer, he said.

Other government agencies worldwide have reached similar findings.

I'm John Russell.

And I’m Ashley Thompson.

John Geddie, Sudarshan Varadhan, and Joe Brock reported on this story for the Reuters news agency. John Russell adapted the report for VOA Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

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Words in This Story

tire – n. a piece of rubber that goes around a wheel

soot – n. black particles that form when when something (such as wood or coal) is burned

garbage – n. useless or unwanted material

hazardous - adj. involving risk or danger

dispose – v. to give away; to set up or put into position

scale – n. size or amount

irritation – n. aggravation; reddening of the skin

exposure – n. the condition of being made known

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