The ship breaking
industry gradually grew since then, and by the mid 80s Bangladesh had
become one of the major ship breaking nations in the world. Some of the
world’s largest decommissioned ships are today scraped at the shores
north of Chittagong, which is the second largest city and major sea port
in the country. Environmental policies and laws were not enforced,
labour salaries were among the lowest in the world and there were no
standards for occupational health and labour safety. Obviously there
were plenty of opportunities to exploit people and the environment when
moving forward with the ship breaking business.
Ship breaking on
the beach, which already at that time was prohibited in most countries,
could be done in Bangladesh without any concern. Poverty and millions of
people without education were looking for livelihood ooportunities.
They provided cheap and exploitable human man power needed for the ship
breaking industry. No major investments were required for engaging in
ship breaking.
 |
Workers with blowtorches |
The present type of ship breaking in Bangladesh
just require a large winch, some blowtorches and maybe a bulldozer. Rest
of the operation is just raw human man power. Labour is extremely
cheap, environmental and labour standards are loosely applied and no
pre-cleaning of the ships are required for entering the ship breaking
beach in Chittagong. Ship breaking is therefore a lucrative business
with few risks for the yard owners, investors and money lenders.
The
ship breaking industry in Bangladesh is estimated worth an annual turn
over of around 1.5 billion dollars. Globally some 700 ocean-going
vessels are scrapped each year, and more than 100 of them are scrapped
in Bangladesh. Some of the ships are 350 meter long with a weight up to
10-15.000 tons. It is estimated that app. 30 percent of the world’s
Light Displacement Tonnes (LDT) were scrapped in Bangladesh during the
period 2000-2010. Since then the business has been slightly declining
due to the global recession and more strict enforcement of national laws
and regulations. But the business is now picking up again, and the
number of ship yards increases year by year.
Ship breaking
generates a lot of jobs, and it is estimated that some 30-50.000 people
are directly employed in the ship breaking industry in Bangladesh.
Additionally, another 100.000 are indirectly involved in the business.
Most of the labourers are hired by the ship yards through local
contractors on a ship by ship basis. A labourer earns around 1-3 dollars
per day depending on the type of work. Some 300-500 people are
typically employed on a temporary basis for dismantling a ship, and many
more are employed in downstream activities for recycling of all kind of
materials from the ships.
 |
The Graveyard of Giants |
Some of the recycled materials are
exported, and the rest is sold of and reused in Bangladesh. A lot of the
materials are of high value to the local economy. In particular,
recycling of steel for producing iron rods for construction, plates for
new ships or for many other purposes is a lucrative business. Up to
70-80 percent of the steel used in Bangladesh is believed to originate
from the ship breaking yards in Chittagong. One of the most valuable
parts of a ship is the propeller, which is often worth 50.000-100.000
dollars. Propellers and other high value items are exported to other
countries.
It is estimated that there are around 100 ship
breaking yards along the coast north of Chittagong, and every year new
yards are being constructed. The ship yards are owned by politicians and
business people.
 |
Two workers on site |
The ship breaking practices applied in
Bangladesh are strictly prohibited by most countries in the world due to
very dangerous nature of the work and the huge environmental
implications. It is the so-called beaching method that is being used in
Bangladesh. The ship is sailed with maximum speed during the high tide
and will be beached over the flat muddy land where it is completely
dismantled by semi- and unskilled labourers during the low tide.
Beaching is considered a specialised operation. The captain on board has
to calculate the movement of the tides, the swell and the wind by the
minute. The closer the ship is beached to the shore, the more profitable
it becomes for the ship yard owner. The gigantic ships are ripped apart
by blowtorches and large steel parts are taken to shore with use of
electric winches. Most work is done by raw human man power.
 |
Two workers taking a rest |
One
might think that a ship to be scrapped has no value and is a liability
rather than an asset. But on the contrary, the scrapping business is so
lucrative that the ship breakers are paying for receiving the ships to
be scrapped. A ship breaker will typically buy a ship to be scrapped for
around 4-10 million dollars depending on the size and quality of the
ship. The purchase of a ship is often done through a middleman, who
links the local buyers with the international sellers. The ship breaker
takes a loan in a local bank often with a high interest rate, and the
full loan is repaid in six months time when the ship is completely
ripped apart and all the scrap is sold to international and national
buyers. Outdated and scrapped ships, which previously where a liability,
is now a great asset.
Working in the ship breaking yards is a
very dangerous job, which involves many human health risks. Workers are
often exposed to asbestos used for insulation in older ships and from
paint containing lead, cadmium and arsenic. It is not seldom that
workers die caused by gas poisoning or explosions and fires. Old ships
are imported without pre-cleaning or removal of toxic gases and
dangerous materials. Each ship contains an average of 7000 - 8000 kilo
of asbestos and 10 - 100 tons of lead paint.
 |
The Chair |
Sometimes gases
explode killing workers. It also happens that workers are crushed by
tumbling or falling steel parts. Sometimes workers fall from the high
sides of ships on which they are working without safety harnesses. Many
of the oxyacetylene cutters work without goggles. Few wear shoes, let
alone protective clothing. Local organisations in Bangladesh estimate
that some 1000-2000 workers have died in the last 30 years, and many
more have suffered serious injuries. General health statistics show that
the percentage of people with disabilities in the Chittagong area is
above average for the country as a whole, because many workers have lost
limbs or got other disabilities from working in the ship breaking
yards.
 |
A worker. The ship yards employ some 30.000 people. It is believed that app. 20 percent of the work force are children. |
The labourers lack basic equipment. When a new ship
arrives, there are containers, chambers and tanks, which contain oil,
petroleum and poisonous gases. One method used for checking the level of
danger in these parts of the ship is to lower down chickens in a string
to check whether there are dangerous gases. If the chickens survive,
the first workers will enter to clean for oil, petroleum and other
flammable substances. The flammable substances are often burned off
before the cutters enter to rip the ship apart. Gas explosions is a
common phenomenon.
 |
Two workers on site |
It is estimated that half of the workers are
under 22 years and nearly half of them are illiterate. Some believe that
up to around 20 percent of the total work force consist of children.
The workers are poor and they have no other alternatives for supporting
themselves and their families than to work in the ship breaking yards.
There are often no other job alternatives for them. The workers do not
know much about rules and regulations on basic occupational health
standards and safety. The labourers or their families are poorly
compensated when injured or killed.
The Government of Bangladesh
has recently introduced new national policies and legislation to improve
the environmental and occupational health and safety standards in the
ship breaking yards. But there is a long way to go. Governance is poor,
and enforcement of policies and laws is often non-existent. Politicians
and decision makers have vested interests in the industry, and
corruption is wide spread making it difficult to enforce rules and
regulations.
In recent years, the ship breaking industry in
Bangladesh has been declining due to the global recession and the
introduction of new tougher national policies and regulation. But the
industry scents morning air. Critics claim that an international
convention on ship recycling adopted by the International Maritime
Organisation (IMO) in January 2010 perpetuates hazardous and polluting
ship breaking on the beaches of the world’s poorest countries, while
obstructing transitions to safer and greener forms of ship recycling. An
EU ban on single-hull tankers and phase-out regulations and an
accelerated phasing-in of double-hulled oil tankers have also meant new
business opportunities for the ship breaking industry in Bangladesh.
 |
Worker in orange |
A
number of new ship breaking yards are under construction on the beach
north of Chittagong. One of the world’s largest middle men in the global
ship breaking business, the owner of Global Marketing Systems,
estimates that one third of the world’s ships need to be scrapped in the
coming years. No doubt that the industry is gearing up for new business
opportunities.
 |
The Graveyard of Giants |
The workers in the ship breaking yards are clear
on two things: that they will die early and that there have been no
improvements over the last thirty years in terms of worker rights,
health and safety.
In this exhibit you can see a few photos from the ship breaking beach in Chittagong.
Photos & text: Jan Møller Hansen. All Rights Reserved
About the photographer:
Jan Møller Hansen is a self-taught and
passionate photographer. He shoots with the best equipment from Canon.
Photography is not his profession - it is his passion. He works for the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark and presently serves as the
Danish Deputy Ambassador to Bangladesh. Jan Møller Hansen presently
lives in Dhaka.
thanks
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