Energy-saving devices called so dangerous everyone must leave for at
least 15 minutes
Thomas Edison, inventor of mercury-free light bulb
Thomas Edison must be rolling over in his grave.
Less than a month after the U.S. Congress passed an energy bill banning
the incandescent light bulb by 2014, the UK Environment Agency issued
guidelines calling for evacuation of any room where an energy-saving
compact fluorescent light bulb is broken, releasing toxic mercury.
The warning comes a month before the British government begins its
phase-out of tungsten bulbs, scheduled to be completed in 2011. The
switchover to CFL bulbs will save at least five million tons of carbon
dioxide emissions every year, the government said.
Health experts warned this week that people with certain skin ailments
will suffer from the new eco-friendly bulbs which cause conditions such
as eczema to flare up. Additionally, the bulbs have been linked to
migraine headaches in some people.
The Environment Agency's latest advice focuses on the 6 to 8 milligrams
of toxic mercury in each bulb.
Users who break a bulb should vacate the room for at least 15 minutes,
the new guidelines say. The debris should not be removed with a vacuum
cleaner, which could put toxic dust into the air, but with rubber
gloves. The broken glass and all residue is to be placed into a sealed
plastic bag and taken to a local official recycling site for proper
disposal.
"Because these light bulbs contain small amounts of mercury, they could
cause a problem if disposed of in a normal bin," environmental
scientist Dr David Spurgeon told the London Daily Mail.
"It is possible that the mercury could be released into the air or from
land-fill when they are released into the wider environment. That is a
concern, because mercury is a well-known toxic substance."
The Environmental Agency noted that neither warnings about the bulbs'
toxicity nor directions for proper disposal is printed on any
packaging.
Such warnings aren't necessary, said one toxicologist who said a number
of bulbs would have to be smashed simultaneously before there was a
danger.
"Mercury accumulates in the body – especially the brain," Dr. David
Ray, from the University of Nottingham, told the BBC. "The biggest
danger is repeated exposure – a one off exposure is not as potentially
dangerous compared to working in a light bulb factory.
"If you smash one bulb then that is not too much of a hazard. However,
if you broke five bulbs in a small unventilated room then you might be
in short term danger."
The most-immediate hazard from the CFL bulbs may be to Brits'
pocketbooks. It costs about $1,300 to properly dispose of one municipal
recycling bin full of bulbs – a figure that is sure to increase
residents' tax bills.
Original
Source
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