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- <text id=90TT1392>
- <title>
- May 28, 1990: Where The Sky Stays Dark
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 28, 1990 Emergency!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 40
- Where the Sky Stays Dark
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The lifting of the Iron Curtain reveals the planet's most
- polluted region
- </p>
- <p>By Frederick Painton--Reported by John Borrell/Prague, Andrea
- Dorfman/New York and Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> Officially, the ravages of pollution in Eastern Europe were
- classified information, Communism's dirtiest secret. For more
- than 40 years, as the devastation mounted, only a few officials
- kept track of the toll. The people could see, smell and
- sometimes choke on contaminated air and water. They could watch
- the grime accumulate on their homes and see the vegetation die.
- But they could not speak about it or protest too loudly, lest
- they be harassed as dangerous dissidents.
- </p>
- <p> Only now, as democratic revolutions take hold, is the full
- extent of Eastern Europe's stunning ecological disaster
- emerging. Flying over Poland, Czechoslovakia and East Germany
- on an otherwise clear day, one can see whole valleys enveloped
- in a heavy blue haze from the belching smokestacks that
- disfigure the landscape. Littered across the East bloc,
- obsolete and unsafe nuclear reactors are decaying, each
- threatening a reprise of the 1986 Chernobyl accident. The Danube
- River and Baltic Sea are deadly sumps. Many lakes and streams
- are fishless, forests are dying, and blackened cities are
- decorated with pollution-eroded sculpture.
- </p>
- <p> The pervasive grime does more than degrade the quality of
- life; it cripples and shortens the lives of human beings.
- Illnesses traceable to pollution consume more than 13% of
- Hungary's health budget; at least 1 out of 17 Hungarian deaths
- stems from environmental causes. Around the East German
- industrial center of Leipzig, life expectancy is six years less
- than the national average. In the nearby town of Espenhain, 4
- out of 5 children develop chronic bronchitis or heart ailments
- by the age of seven. Children in northern Bohemia, the heart of
- Czechoslovakia's industrial region, are taken out of the area
- for up to a month each year as a health measure.
- </p>
- <p> A major source of the pollution is the relentless burning
- of soft, brown high-sulfur coal, called lignite, which is the
- basic fuel of the East bloc. On cold winter days in Leipzig,
- the yellow-brown smog emitted by coal-fired power plants is so
- thick that drivers are forced to turn on their headlights
- during the day. In the triangle comprising southern Poland and
- northern Czechoslovakia, which is covered by a permanent cloud
- of emissions from factories and power plants, residents
- complain that the air is so bad that washed clothes turn dirty
- before they can dry on the line. For miles around the notorious
- Romanian "black town" of Copsa Mica, the trees and grass are
- so stained by soot that they look as if they have been soaked
- in ink. "Even horses can stay here for only a couple of years,"
- says Dr. Alexandru Balin, who works in a local
- occupational-health clinic. "Then they have to be taken away,
- or else they will die."
- </p>
- <p> Smoke from burning coal and car exhausts contains carbon
- monoxide, a host of carcinogens and sulfur dioxide, which helps
- form the acid rain that is withering Europe's once lush
- forests. In Poland more than 50,600 hectares (125,000 acres)
- of woodland have been destroyed, and nearly half the remaining
- trees are damaged. More than 32,400 hectares (80,000 acres) of
- Czechoslovakia's forests have been lost.
- </p>
- <p> Eastern Europe's majestic waterways, fouled by sewage, toxic
- chemicals and acid rain, are in no better shape. Fish catches
- in the Baltic Sea, long a dumping ground for industrial wastes
- from Poland, East Germany and Lithuania, are declining
- dramatically, and summer bathing is in jeopardy. The Vistula
- River, which runs through Poland, is so laden with poisons and
- corrosive chemicals that stretches are considered unusable for
- factory coolant systems, much less for drinking water. The
- Danube is endangered at every turning by runoff from
- nitrogen-rich agricultural fertilizers and by the industrial
- plants that discharge along its banks, from West Germany, where
- it rises, to Romania, where it pours into the Black Sea.
- </p>
- <p> Among the more ominous environmental threats is the
- possibility of accidents at the two dozen Soviet-built nuclear
- plants in Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Bulgaria and Hungary.
- Last January the East German government acknowledged that in
- late 1975 a network of cables caught fire at its Greifswald
- complex on the Baltic Sea and nearly caused a reactor meltdown.
- Though a disaster was averted, the country is considering major
- cuts in its nuclear-energy output. In Poland's Baltic ports,
- dockers refuse to handle Soviet-made parts for the country's
- first nuclear power station, which has been under construction
- for a decade. It is doubtful that the project will ever be
- completed.
- </p>
- <p> Not all of Eastern Europe's pollution is self-generated.
- Since 1975, East Germany has earned about $600 million in
- foreign exchange by serving as a landfill for Western Europe,
- which has major pollution problems of its own. Every day
- hundreds of garbage-laden trucks cross the border from West
- Germany and West Berlin to dump their loads. Last year they
- delivered 5.5 million tons of household and construction
- rubbish--plus an additional 65,000 tons of garbage that
- contained dangerous substances. Smaller amounts of trash came
- from the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland.
- </p>
- <p> One consequence is that in Ketzin, 20 km (12 miles) from
- Berlin, a 56-hectare (140-acre) pile of imported rubbish
- threatens to poison the groundwater. In January, after the
- city's angry citizens discovered the source of the heap, they
- held a protest with banners proclaiming EAST GERMANY IS NOT TO
- BECOME EUROPE'S TOILET. After the demonstration, East Germany's
- Environment Minister banned toxic-waste imports to Ketzin.
- </p>
- <p> While East Europeans recognize their pollution peril, the
- effort to clean up the environment will inevitably clash with
- their desire to boost consumption of food and manufactured
- products. The revolutions against Communism were in part a
- reaction to a system that could not deliver the goods. The
- Paris-based International Energy Agency estimates that energy
- consumption in the region will rise 40% by 2005, as countries
- try to rev up production. Observes Polish Prime Minister
- Tadeusz Mazowiecki: "People are impatient with the lack of
- commodities. They expect quick results from us."
- </p>
- <p> The Lenin Steel Mill, on the outskirts of Krakow in southern
- Poland, is a classic example of the dilemma. Yellowish-brown
- smoke from the mill's grimy chimneys falls as corrosive dust
- or acid rain on the city's ancient center. Sandstone statues
- and figurines are melting away. "We have done more damage to
- Krakow in 40 years of Communist rule than in the previous six
- centuries," says Jerzy Sawicki, secretary of the Polish
- Ecological Club, one of many groups working to save the city.
- One way to curb the pollution would be to cut sharply the
- plant's production. But even Solidarity, the trade union that
- led Poland's struggle for democracy, balks at the idea.
- </p>
- <p> Eastern Europe cannot hope to scrub itself clean without
- assistance from the West. A study by the West German Institute
- for Economic Research estimates that $200 billion would be
- needed over the next two decades just to deal with industrial
- pollution. West Germany plans to allocate some $500 million to
- clean up East Germany, and Sweden has approved $45 million for
- Poland. Such grants are not mere charity. Since nature erects
- no barriers across the air, land or water, the West knows that
- the heavy pollution to the East casts a grim shadow over the
- entire continent.
- </p>
- <p>CLOUD OVER A CONTINENT [Sulfur emissions in thousands of tons.]
- </p>
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>E. Germany:<cell type=i>2,425
- <row><cell>Poland:<cell>2,090
- <row><cell>Britain:<cell>1,890
- <row><cell>Spain:<cell>1,625
- <row><cell>Czechoslovakia:<cell>1,400
- <row><cell>Italy:<cell>1,185
- <row><cell>France:<cell>760
- <row><cell>W. Germany:<cell>750
- </table>
- <p>EAST GERMANY
- </p>
- <p> Like many towns in East Germany's industrial heartland,
- Leuna is darkened by choking fumes from a local chemical plant.
- At any given time, some 60% of the inhabitants suffer from
- respiratory ailments. East Germany gets 80% of its electricity
- by burning brown coal, which produces a smog that can force
- drivers to use headlights even during the day. Almost 9% of the
- country's farmland has been ruined by pollutants and overdoses
- of fertilizer, and more than 80% of the forests may already be
- damaged by acid rain. One-tenth of the population is forced to
- drink water that does not meet public-health standards.
- </p>
- <p>CZECHOSLOVAKIA
- </p>
- <p> Pine forests along the Czechoslovak-East German border have
- been defoliated by acid rain. Some 32,400 hectares (80,000
- acres) of Czechoslovakia's forests have been lost and 50% of
- its drinking water tainted. Air pollution in northern Bohemia
- has reduced the average life expectancy to several years lower
- than the national norm.
- </p>
- <p>POLAND
- </p>
- <p> The pollution-choked Oder River, like 95% of the river water
- in what may be Europe's most polluted nation, is unfit to
- drink. Half Poland's lakes are also contaminated. The sky is
- darkened by fumes from such sources as the big steel mill in
- Krakow and mining operations in Silesia. Much of the food grown
- in Silesia is so contaminated by toxins that it is unsafe to
- eat.
- </p>
- <p>ROMANIA
- </p>
- <p> In the "black town" of Copsa Mica, two antiquated factories
- spew out more than 30,000 tons of soot every year, making
- everything in sight as dark as ink. Even the horses have to be
- moved after a couple of years, or they will die. Almost all of
- Romania's river water is undrinkable, since 4,500 purification
- plants do not work.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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