Companies like Apple could make life better for the families
that mine the cobalt. Want to make a bet
on how much effort Apple will put into that?
Is your smart phone worth this?
The world’s soaring
demand for cobalt is at times met by workers, including children, who labor in
harsh and dangerous conditions. An estimated 100,000 cobalt miners in Congo use
hand tools to dig hundreds of feet underground with little oversight and few safety
measures, according to workers, government officials and evidence found by The
Washington Post during visits to remote mines. Deaths and injuries are common.
And the mining activity exposes local communities to levels of toxic metals
that appear to be linked to ailments that include breathing problems and birth
defects, health officials say.
The Post traced this
cobalt pipeline and, for the first time, showed how cobalt mined in these harsh
conditions ends up in popular consumer products. It moves from small-scale
Congolese mines to a single Chinese company — Congo DongFang International
Mining, part of one of the world’s biggest cobalt producers, Zhejiang Huayou
Cobalt — that for years has supplied some of the world’s largest battery
makers. They, in turn, have produced the batteries found inside products such
as Apple’s iPhones — a finding that calls into question corporate assertions
that they are capable of monitoring their supply chains for human rights abuses
or child labor.
Dig into this story and you will find greedy multi-national corporations and shady Chinese companies working together to insure their own profits no matter the human or environmental costs.
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