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Author Topic: Radioactive cheese grater--from guess where?  (Read 1183 times)
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catbird
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« on: November 12, 2008, 07:23:54 AM »

http://www.mlive.com/flintjournal/index.ssf/2008/11/a_radioactive_cheese_grater_at.html
 
"MILive (Michigan) November 11, 2008
A radioactive cheese grater at Genesee Township landfill points out toxic dangers from Chinese products
GENESEE TOWNSHIP, Michigan -- There are lots of toxic hazards to guard against in the stuff that ends up at recycling centers and landfills.
Until this past summer, a radioactive cheese grater wasn't one of them.
According to the state Department of Environmental Quality, the common kitchen utensil with an uncommon past set off the alarms at Genesee Recycling in August, sending ripples all the way to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Environmental Protection Agency.
"We know it was manufactured in China but at this point we are still unsure what the source of the material is or was, or where it possibly entered the system," said Thor Strong, the state DEQ's chief of radiological protection.
Strong said his office got the call when workers at the recycling facility dug through an incoming scrap metal load that had set off their radiation monitors, tracking the source to a cheap handheld cheese grater made by EKCO and labelled "Made in China."


More at link.  Sent by a friend.
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petslave
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« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2008, 07:47:38 AM »

I've been wondering when toxic metal would come up in the cheap kitchenware that is sold everywhere.  Almost all kitchen prep items in stores now are MIC.   Radioactive is something I wouldn't have ever guessed though.  A

re our kitchens full of radioactive waste?  Have they been that way for years?  How are we supposed to test for this?  And how many other toxic chemicals are we getting in our food every day from industrial waste included in the metal?
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catbird
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« Reply #2 on: November 12, 2008, 07:51:25 AM »

I guess we keep the Geiger counter right next to the lead test kit, and the melamine test kit, and...
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JanC
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« Reply #3 on: November 12, 2008, 07:58:45 AM »

When is this s*** going to stop?  How many of us have to die or get deathly ill before our gov't feels enough is enough?  You can bet your bippy that they know exactly where to get items NOT MIC, including food.  It's fine for us but certainly not for them or their families.

I wonder if they will ever take steps to make imports safer.  I somehow think this "let's not upset China" has been taken a bit too far.......who will pay my medical bills when I get deathly ill from all this poison I've ingested?  Bet me our gov't won't be there to help me.

I guess we'll all get to chit-chat & enjoy our morning coffee while on dialysis. Undecided

Huh..... Angry
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petslave
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« Reply #4 on: November 12, 2008, 08:25:11 AM »

From that article:

"Investigators believe the radioactive isotope Cobalt 60 was present in materials inadvertently smelted into the stainless steel wire around the grater's rim during its overseas manufacture.

It was probably shipped to the U.S. more than six years ago, before Michigan's border crossings had radiation monitors in place."


Inadvertantly??
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Spartycats
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« Reply #5 on: November 12, 2008, 08:33:59 AM »

Well, I'm in Michigan and last weekend I INADVERTENTLY grabbed my hand-held grater (same brand, bought some years ago) to grate a bit of carrot into my homecooked cat food.   Angry
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JanC
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« Reply #6 on: November 12, 2008, 01:38:13 PM »

Sort of makes you wonder what else inadvertently got into their products, food included.

Seems to me I've heard this one before.

Inadvertently on purpose. Shocked
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petslave
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« Reply #7 on: November 12, 2008, 01:42:15 PM »

I have an old Ecko grater too, have been wanting to pitch it for years, but don't want to buy a new one from MIC.  Hey, by now, it's probably gone through a few half lives and isn't as radioactive as a new one anyway, right?
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3catkidneyfailure
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« Reply #8 on: November 12, 2008, 02:54:56 PM »

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/11/11/business/scrap.php

Nuclear scrap contaminating consumer goods
By Jonathan Tirone and Subramaniam Sharma Bloomberg NewsPublished: November 11, 2008
Last year, U.S. Customs rejected 64 shipments of radioactive goods at U.S. ports, including purses, cutlery, sinks and hand tools, according to data released by the Department of Homeland Security in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. India was the largest source, followed by China.

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lesliek
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« Reply #9 on: November 12, 2008, 03:50:35 PM »

NedF posted an American co today that makes knives,etc. Its in the made in the USA thread. I saved it but didn't have time to see all the products. Maybe its time to start replacing some of our iffy kitchen gadgets.
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3catkidneyfailure
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« Reply #10 on: November 12, 2008, 05:01:27 PM »

The irony here is the government is looking for terrorist bombs, and it seems what we have
to be afraid of is the kitchen sink [and beer kegs] ... Roll Eyes
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catbird
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« Reply #11 on: November 12, 2008, 05:09:32 PM »


A couple of the grater links are missing now, like the one posted and the first 2 you get from Google.  Looks like the EPA in all its wisdom (a.k.a. corruption) covered up this story instead of recalling the grater as they should have.


Or maybe Homeland Security is responsible for the cover-up and "missing links"...
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NedF
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« Reply #12 on: November 12, 2008, 05:16:48 PM »

This company lists country of origin for alot of the products they sell:

http://www.fantes.com/graters.html

Sadly the only made in USA graters are the microplane ones.

I bought my made in USA cheese grater at ACE hardware of all places. In fact, I always look there first if I need any kitchen items.
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3catkidneyfailure
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« Reply #13 on: November 12, 2008, 05:26:23 PM »

The UN IAEA is also reporting this story. Off to look for the link to the UN warning from yesterday, Nov. 11.

[Just in case this link disappears, too:]

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1226404708450&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Radioactive beer kegs menace public, boost recycling costs
By BLOOMBERG
French authorities made headlines last month when they said as many as 500 sets of radioactive buttons had been installed in elevators around the country. It wasn't an isolated case.

A TRUCK stops at a radiation portal after collecting scrap metal at the Jewometaal Stainless Processing BV plant in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Photo: Bloomberg

Improper disposal of industrial equipment and medical scanners containing radioactive materials is letting nuclear waste trickle into scrap smelters, contaminating consumer goods, threatening the $140 billion trade in recycled metal and spurring the United Nations to call for increased screening.

Last year, US Customs rejected 64 shipments of radioactive goods at the nation's ports, including purses, cutlery, sinks and hand tools, according to data released by the Department of Homeland Security in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. India was the largest source, followed by China.

"The world is waking up very late to this," said Paul de Bruin, radiation safety chief for Jewometaal Stainless Processing BV in Rotterdam, the world's biggest stainless-steel scrap yard. "There will be more of this because a lot of the scrap coming to us right now is from the 1970s and 1980s, when there were a lot of uncontrolled radioactive sources distributed to industry."

On October 21, the French nuclear regulator said elevator buttons assembled by Mafelec, a Chimilin, France-based company, contained radioactive metal shipped from India. Employees who handled the buttons received three times the safe dose of radiation for non-nuclear workers, according to the agency.

Operations at the factory are now back to normal and the company has cut ties with the "source" of the radiation, Mafelec said in a statement. "In the worst-case scenario the exposure would have been under that of a medical scan," CEO Gilles Heinrich said.

A million missing sources

Many atomic devices weren't licensed when they were first widely used by industry in the 1970s. While most countries have since tightened regulations, it is still difficult to track first-generation equipment that is now coming to the end of its useful life.

Abandoned medical scanners, food-processing devices and mining equipment containing radioactive metals such as cesium-137 and cobalt-60 are often picked up by scrap collectors and sold to recyclers, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN's nuclear arm. De Bruin said he sometimes finds such items hidden inside beer kegs and lead pipes to prevent detection.

There may be more than one million missing radioactive sources worldwide, the Vienna-based IAEA estimates.

"We're passing by the first era of nuclear applications, so disused material is increasing," said Vilmos Friedrich, an IAEA inspector. "Until recently, there hasn't been licensing" for industrial devices.

'Alarms will go up'

Smelting such items contaminates recycled metal used to make new products and the furnaces that process the material. Cleanups cost as much as $30 million, according to the Brussels-based Bureau of International Recycling, which represents metal, paper and glass manufacturers.

The danger increases when metal prices rise, pushing scavengers to pick up and sell more material, said Martin Magold, who led a Geneva-based UN team that tracked radioactive metal shipments in Europe.

Prices for scrap steel quadrupled to $665 a ton in Rotterdam over the past five years. After peaking on July 3, prices dropped to $115.50 last week as the slowing global economy eroded demand.

"Because of high scrap prices, any little piece is being sold for recycling," Magold said. "Alarms will go up dramatically in coming years."

Nucor Corp., the biggest US-based steel producer, has spent more than $1m. installing and upgrading radiation detection equipment at its plants, said Steve Roland, environmental director for the Charlotte, North Carolina company.

"Orphaned sources are a significant problem worldwide for the recycling industry," he said. "Anything governments can do to remove sources from commerce and hold people accountable for the loss is to our benefit."

Cancer, birth defects

Chronic exposure to low doses of radiation can lead to cataracts, cancer and birth defects, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.

A study of 6,252 Taiwanese people who lived in apartments built with radioactive reinforcing steel found that 117 cancer cases were diagnosed from 1983 to 2005. The research showed a statistically significant increase in leukemia and breast cancer.

"People don't understand the risk," said Dr. Peter Chang, a professor of environmental health at Taiwan's National Medical Center who developed the study. "We have an extreme lack of education."

Spanish cloud

In 1998, equipment containing cesium-137 was smelted at a foundry in Los Barrios, Spain, operated by Acerinox SA, the world's largest stainless-steel producer. Radiation spread over Italy and France, triggering concern that a reactor had melted down in Russia, according to an IAEA report on the incident.

While only six people were exposed to radiation, the cleanup, hazardous-waste storage and interruption of business cost the company an estimated $25m., the report said.

At the time, Acerinox had radiation detectors installed in parts of the factory and assumed the scrap it purchased had been inspected by the dealer, said Juan Garcia, a Madrid-based spokesman for the company. Acerinox has since improved security by spending about €100m. ($129m.) on "advanced contamination-detection technologies," he said.

The event also led Spain to rewrite rules governing the scrap-metal industry and to create an agency that helps recyclers dispose of radioactive materials.

The IAEA may recommend that governments increase monitoring of scrap shipments at international borders and that recyclers screen all material entering their plants, according to draft guidelines circulated by the agency.

ArcelorMittal scanners

Many large metal producers in the US and western Europe say they already screen for nuclear material.

"All our steelworks are equipped to verify possible radioactivity contamination of the scrap shipments," Jean Lasar, a spokesman for Luxembourg-based ArcelorMittal, the world's biggest steelmaker, said in an e-mail.

Much of the contaminated scrap originates in or passes through countries with inadequate licensing regulations and detection equipment.

A TRUCK stops at a radiation portal after collecting scrap metal at the Jewometaal Stainless Processing BV plant in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Photo: Bloomberg

For example, about 1,000 radio-electronic thermal generating units were misplaced after the collapse of the Soviet Union, said Abel Gonzalez, a former IAEA inspector who helped retrieve such orphaned sources in Russia. The devices, used to power remote lighthouses, each contain as much radiation as was released by the Chernobyl meltdown in 1986, he said.

Cesium-137 in Kyrgyzstan

In December, officials in Kyrgyzstan discovered cesium-137 that probably came from discarded food-irradiation equipment in a trainload of scrap bound for Iran. Four emergency workers were exposed to high levels of radiation when they responded to the incident, according to local media reports. Kyrgyzstan's delegation to the IAEA declined to comment.

Russia and the other former Soviet states accounted for 13 percent of the scrap exported worldwide last year, according to the World Steel Association, which represents about 180 metal companies.

Overall, 123 shipments of contaminated goods have been denied entry to US ports since screening began in 2003, according to the Homeland Security data. Of those, 67 originated in India, 23 came from China and 20 were from Canada. This year, a total of 32 cases had been reported through early July.

'No authority, no control'

There is no guarantee materials rejected by the US won't reappear in countries with less stringent monitoring.

"The only authority we have is that we don't let them into the US, so that ship was turned around and those components left the US," said Dale Klein, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. "Where they went, we have no authority and no control."

Homeland Security declined to give information on where shipments ended up after being turned away from the US.

At Kandla, India's biggest port by volume, most scrap is imported in shipping containers that are unloaded at one of 12 cargo docks. None of it is screened for contamination.

"There are no means as of today to check the radioactive material in the scrap that's imported or exported," said H.C. Venkatesh, a traffic manager at Kandla Port Trust.

India plans to install scanners at Kandla and three other ports that handle about 80% of the nation's container traffic. They will become operational starting in April.

A year ago, Dutch authorities seized a shipment of radioactive purses in Amsterdam and traced them to Maple Exports Ltd., a Kolkata-based leather-goods maker, according to the inspectors who impounded the cargo.

'Rogue supplier'

Gaurav Bhalotia, a director at Maple Exports, denied that any of his company's purses were contaminated, though he said, "It's impossible for us to check every item." The merchandise belonged to another company that shared space in the same shipping container, he said in a telephone interview.

Maple Exports has become more careful about who it buys metal from and may buy a radiation scanner, Bhalotia said.

Competition discourages some manufacturers from asking questions about where metal originates, he said.

"People are driven so much by price, they buy from any supplier," Bhalotia said. "They want to buy cheap, and when there is this rogue supplier the whole chain suffers."

Some firms already screen products for contamination. Indian Union Manufacturers Pvt. sends samples of its bells, buckles and belts to Indian labs, said D. Roy Chowdhury, a director of the company based at Kanpur in northern Uttar Pradesh state.

Cobalt and nickel

The problem for Chowdhury is that the nickel he uses to burnish his products is prone to contamination. Cobalt-60 and nickel are often melted together and are chemically suited to stick to each other.

"There is concern among exporters about the presence of radioactive substances," Chowdhury said. "I have heard from my buyers in Kolkata about consignments coming back."

India began probing the nation's scrap-metal handlers after the radioactive elevator buttons were detected in France.

"This is causing a big economic loss to the exporters," said Satya Pal Agarwal, head of radiological safety at India's Atomic Energy Regulatory Board. "We are trying to trace the source. Most probably it is from imported metal scrap."

Homeland Security and the US Department of Energy are funding a $60m. program to install radiation monitors at ports around the world. The Secure Freight Initiative started in October 2007 at three sites in the UK, Pakistan and Honduras.

About 800 ports worldwide handle cargo containers, according to London's Drewry Shipping Consultants Ltd.

'You die'

Similar equipment is already used in Rotterdam, Europe's busiest port, where 30-meter mountains of disfigured metal wait to be processed.

At nearby Jewometaal, De Bruin switched on a dosimeter, the modern equivalent of a Geiger counter. The device squealed as he entered the corner of a warehouse where radioactive metals are stored until they are sent to Covra NV, the Netherlands' state-run nuclear-waste dump.

In his office, De Bruin donned gloves before selecting a pair of long tweezers and pulling a piece of cesium-137 the size of a match head out of a bottle.

"If you get a dose of this on your hands it's no problem," said De Bruin, a former customs agent who has worked in nuclear research reactors. "If you get it in your lungs you die."

Hours before, he'd sent a truckload of Venezuelan scrap to the Netherlands' nuclear-waste dump.

Covra charges a one-time fee of €110 a liter to watch over corroding cobalt and cesium metals.

"We should accept these orphaned sources rather than making a fuss over which country is responsible and who should bear the burden," said facility manager Henry Codee, in his office overlooking the mango-colored waste hangar. "That's the only way to solve the problem."
« Last Edit: November 12, 2008, 05:43:38 PM by 3catkidneyfailure » Logged
JJ
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« Reply #14 on: November 12, 2008, 07:15:07 PM »

Ned, Ace is where I just bought the same exact manual can opener as the one I've had since 1973 that lost it sharpness and I couldn't find anyplace to have it sharpened at. Ace has a lot of made in america kitchen things. So now will check there first and foremost when I need anything since who knows what might be contaminated in my kitchen because of this new information on the grater and gawd knows what else. Wonder where my flour sifter was made...just checked and nothing on where either one is from.

Now have to look for a center that has geiger counters for checking on this.

This is utterly disgusting. Always felt that cancer was never heriditary or just in your cells and passed down the bloodline. This is another way of bringing cancer into your life and sickening and eventually killing people. The money, always about the money. Do anything with no regard for human life as long as our cash registers ring up SALE, SALE, SALE.

Definetly going to Ace Hardware to replace things that I have bought in past few years. Anyone know if older items such as those from Japan from 20 yrs ago would be safe?
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