The World's Most Dangerous Job

World's dirtiest refuse operation gets a revamp

The World's Most Dangerous Job SBS reports from Bangladesh, where mega ships go to die. Has regulation forced the industry to clean up its act? Or are these scrapyards the world's dirtiest and most dangerous place to work?
The monitoring of the shipbreaking industry is especially weak in Bangladesh, which is why it is the most popular destination internationally. Bareesh explains: “Ships are filled with harmful gases, asbestos, and the shipbreaking yards [contain] dangerously high levels of lead, of cadmium, of arsenic”. Zahir runs a new “Green Company”, under stricter regulations. While profit extraction and corner-cutting are significant factors in this disastrously dangerous profession, Zahir argues that the ship-breaking crisis exposes a larger imbalance at play: “A ship is built in a developed world and they make profit from it for 30 years. We get it for six months, and all the blame comes on us”.
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