Morte lente de l'amiante

Directed by

Since January 2005, the use and production of asbestos is prohibited within the European Union. Yet in the poorer southern economies it is still widely used and permitted. Wherever asbestos has been in use, it is leaving a trail of devastation in its wake. In Europe, 500,000 will die from asbestos-related illnesses within the coming 30 years – 100,000 of them in France alone. For many years, asbestos had been the preferred material of the engineering and construction industry: cheap, convenient and fireproof. Nevertheless, the medical community has known for decades that asbestos is a health hazard. In the 1970s asbestos was linked to causing cancer. How is it possible that workers’ health–or even that of entire populations--was treated with such contempt? How can we accept that the use of asbestos continues in many countries of the southern hemisphere?

Localized Title
[Asbestos, a slow death]
Genre
Documentary
Country
France
Year
2004
Duration
55'
Luc Martin-Gousset, Serge Gordey
Languages
French
Pollution

Pollution

Water, air, and land are affected by a phenomenon that is spreading rapidly across the planet, from small to large scales, turning into a worldwide crisis due to plastic pollution.
Food on Film project
Food on Film
Partners
Slow Food
Associazione Cinemambiente
Cezam
Innsbruck nature film festival
mobilEvent
In collaboration with
Interfilm
UNISG - University of Gastronomic Sciences

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the Creative Europe Media Program. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.