News Item Archive

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Displaying first 25 items in reverse date order (default)
 

Recalled Asbestos Contaminated Toys

Jun 10, 2026

The link cited below takes you to a Slovenian Government website which details Dangerous and non-compliant products including food and non-food products being sold from national outlets. It lists several products recalled this year by the EU Safety Gate scheme due to asbestos contamination. The latest recalls mentioned were dated the end of May 2026 and were for Kiddo world Mega Construction Site Toy: Sensory Set with Kinetic Sand and Orb Funkee Monkee Hairdo Stretchy Sand Toy. The EU notifications are available from this website in the Slovenian language. See: Nevarni in neskladni izdelki [Dangerous and non-compliant products].
 

The Polluter Should Pay!

Jun 10, 2026

Even though Austrian authorities knew that stone and gravel from 4 Burgenland quarries were contaminated with asbestos, they allowed millions of tons to be sold for use in public areas, roads, schools and hospitals in Hungary. “It is clear,” said a spokesman for Greenpeace Austria “that the authorities had been aware of asbestos contamination for decades.” Campaigners argue that Austria has a duty to take back its toxic exports. See: Greenpeace Austria: “Lo Stato austriaco riprenda la ghiaia con amianto inviata in Ungheria” [Greenpeace Austria: “Austrian state should take back asbestos-based gravel sent to Hungary”].
 

Two More Asbestos Recalls!

Jun 10, 2026

In the June 1, 2026 article cited below, it was reported that despite the fact that the UK’s Office of Product Safety and Standards (OPSS) had recalled Montessori sand art trays in March, 2026 because of asbestos contamination, they were still being sold two months later by retailers on Amazon Marketplace and the TikTok Shop. It was also noted that researchers from the Which Consumer organization had found tremolite asbestos in the GL Style Sand Bottle Art Heart or Stars set sold at Asda supermarkets. See: Two more children’s sand kits pulled from shelves over asbestos content.
 

Asbestos Crime & Punishment

Jun 10, 2026

A joint effort by local police and specialized personnel from the Macerata Labor Inspectorate Unit in Tolentino, central Italy uncovered multiple asbestos infringements at a construction site. The subsequent prosecution resulted in total fines and penalties to the company and its personnel of €28,000+ (US$32,550). According to the authorities, more asbestos audits will be conducted on construction sites “to prevent accidents in the workplace and counteract the dangers associated with exposure to harmful substances such as asbestos, to protect the safety of workers and public health.” See: Amianto e sicurezza a rischio. Multe e stop ai lavori nel cantiere [Asbestos and safety at risk. Fines and work stoppage at construction site].
 

Two More Toxic Toys Recalled!

Jun 10, 2026

On May 29, 2026, the French authorities issued recalls for two products. The first one recalled was notice A2601001 – JEU DE LANCER DE SACS [A2601001 – SACK TOSS GAME] which was found to contain asbestos in the sand used to fill the bags. It was sold throughout France from February 25, 2025 until February 27, 2026. The other recalled item was A2502373 – SABLIER DECO [A2502373 – DECORATIVE HOURGLASS] which also contained asbestos. It was sold throughout the country from August 7, 2025 until February 27, 2026. See: French Government Rappel [Recall] Conso Website.
 

Asbestos in Schools

Jun 10, 2026

Hazardous conditions at Randfontein Secondary School and Toekomsrus Primary School in the Gauteng province of South Africa were highlighted last week by provincial politicians who said that the presence of deteriorating asbestos-containing material in schools posed serious health risks to hundreds of school users. “It is outrageous,” said Member of the Gauteng Provincial Legislature Sergio Isa Dos Santos on June 1 “that government continues to drag its feet on eradicating asbestos schools despite the well-documented health dangers associated with asbestos exposure.” See: Asbestos Schools Still Endanger Hundreds of West Rand Learners Despite Government Promises.
 

Asbestos Cosmetics Dossier

Jun 8, 2026

The callous reply from the Shiseido company to a request for information pertinent to the asbestos death in 2024 of a cosmetics saleswoman was reported in the article cited below. According to the deceased’s employer: “there is no way to verify the records of raw materials at that time.” In December 2025, the Sendai Labor Standards Inspection Office recognized the death as work-related and was due to the presence of asbestos in the cosmetics and baby powder she handled. See: アスベスト特有のガンで元化粧品販売員の女性が死亡 元勤務先の資生堂「当時の原料の記録を確認する方法がない」と回答 [Former Cosmetics Saleswoman Dies from Asbestos-Specific Cancer; Former Employer Shiseido Responds: ‘There Is No Way to Check Records of Raw Materials at the Time’].
 

Lung Cancer Screening: Yes or No?

Jun 8, 2026

An academic article by Australian lung cancer researchers, published on the website of the Occupational and Environmental Medicine Journal in May 2025, looked at the effectiveness of lung cancer screening (LCS) for an asbestos-exposed population. The researchers concluded that in this cohort of individuals “current LCS eligibility criteria and risk models mostly underestimate the risk of lung cancer, reflecting the need for improved risk prediction models that adequately account for asbestos exposure.” See: Lung cancer risk prediction models and asbestos exposure: a validation study on the Western Australia Asbestos Review Program.
 

Data Bombshell!

Jun 8, 2026

According to new research, detailed in the June 1, 2026 Daily Mail article referenced below, UK authorities have been grossly underestimating the country’s asbestos-related mortality for decades. Whereas current data estimates that there are 5,000+ UK asbestos deaths a year, new research suggests that a more accurate figure would be 20,000. The huge discrepancy is because the number of deaths ascribed to asbestos-related lung cancer is presently estimated at 2,300 annually whereas the new research indicates this figure could be ~20,000/year. See [Subscription site]: Britain's Fresh Asbestos Nightmare.
 

Asbestos Alert over Toxic Toys

Jun 8, 2026

The June 3, 2026 article cited below, which appeared on a Vietnamese news portal, reported discoveries made by the Which Consumer Organization (Which?) UK of asbestos contamination of consumer products sold for children. Tests undertaken by Which? of a Montessori sand art toy found tremolite asbestos, a substance banned in the UK. Although this product had been recalled by the Government in March, the report said that it could still be purchased from multiple online retailers two months later. See: Đồ chơi nhiễm amiăng và trách nhiệm của sàn thương mại điện tử [Asbestos-contaminated toys and the responsibility of e-commerce platforms].
 

Who Pays the Cost of Asbestos Use?

Jun 8, 2026

An article by Dr. Karen Lee Morrissette, from the Center for Asbestos Related Disease in Libby Montana, which was uploaded on June 4th to the Open Access Government website, reviewed the evolving knowledge about the health consequences of human exposures to asbestos. The author highlighted the worldwide struggle faced by injured workers to hold negligent corporations to account for their injuries and the use by defendants of legal and financial resources to avoid paying asbestos compensation. Dr. Morrissette concluded: “With due respect to industry and commerce, perhaps the Precautionary Principle should be applied to asbestos, whereby protection of human health automatically prevails over industry profit.” See: Legal action on asbestos-related disease.
 

Mesothelioma Treatment: Update

Jun 8, 2026

The first randomised UK clinical trial – HIT-MESO trial – is testing the effectiveness of using “highly targeted proton beam therapy…(to) improve survival and quality of life in selected patients with the condition…” The research is being carried out by University College London and University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and will treat 148 patients from 23 NHS centers in England and Wales. According to HIT-MESO chief investigator Dr Crispin Hiley: “Proton beam therapy allows us to deliver high-dose radiation far more precisely, sparing critical organs like the heart and healthy lung.” See: On the horizon: proton beam therapy for mesothelioma.
 

Judicial Setback in Tokyo

Jun 5, 2026

A May 28, 2026 ruling of the Tokyo High Court dismissed a claim brought by construction workers and bereaved families against the government and building material manufacturers for health damage caused by asbestos exposures experienced by construction workers. After the ruling was published, plaintiffs' lawyers announced their intention to appeal the “extremely unjust” verdict. See: 「風で粉じんが希釈される」屋外作業者らの“アスベスト”被害救済認めず 東京2陣訴訟でも [“Dust is diluted by the wind”: Compensation for asbestos-related damages suffered by outdoor workers denied in Tokyo second lawsuit].
 

Victim’s Verdict!

Jun 5, 2026

On May 27, 2026, the Sixth Chamber of the Superior Labor Court of Brazil ordered Teadit Brasil Ltd. to pay compensation of R$200,000 (US$40,000) to a textile worker who developed asbestosis after working from 1973 until 1983 on a production line at the company’s factory. According to her evidence, at no time during her employment did the company adopt safety measures or promote awareness of the asbestos hazard. A lower court had awarded the claimant only R$ 80,000 in damages. See: Tecelã aposentada receberá reparação por doença decorrente de contato com amianto [Retired weaver to receive compensation for illness resulting from contact with asbestos].
 

Cape Asbestos: Update

Jun 5, 2026

Over the years, many lawyers attempted to hold the former British company Cape Asbestos to account for the damage done by its deadly shipments of asbestos fiber to the US. They failed. On May 28, 2026, a South Carolina (SC) Supreme Court upheld a preliminary ruling in Tibbs v. Asbestos Corp. Limited which will allow litigants “to pursue the foreign insurance assets and liabilities of the English company Cape Intermediate Holdings Limited (CIHL), successor to Cape Asbestos.” The SC Supreme Court ruled that Cape’s provocative refusal to appear in US court proceedings amounted to “moral fraud.” See: South Carolina Supreme Court Decision Raises Historic Asbestos Liability Questions for ESAB.
 

Calabria’s Asbestos Crisis

Jun 5, 2026

The health emergency created by the asbestos legacy in the Italian region of Calabria remains unaddressed according to the article cited below: “The Region has not invested a single euro in remediation of this dangerous enemy since the promulgation of Regional Law 14/2011, thus losing the famous €43 million in European funds for public buildings in 2022.” The Regional Asbestos Plan, which was approved in 2022 to great acclaim, has now expired and yet no remediation was carried out. See: Emergenza amianto in Calabria, bonifiche ferme e comuni in crisi [Asbestos emergency in Calabria, cleanups stalled and municipalities in crisis].
 

Asbestos and Cancer: worse than we thought?

Jun 5, 2026

A one-hour webinar held on May 28, 2026 by the UK’s Asbestos Removal and Contractors Association, and the Asbestos Testing and Consultancy Association addressed topical questions including: Asbestos and Cancer: Is it worse than we thought? According to eminent expert Professor Daniel Murphy, although male mortality rates from asbestos-related diseases are beginning to decline, there are “statistically significant increases among groups not traditionally associated with heavy exposure, including carpenters and joiners, and among female workers in secretarial, teaching and education roles.” Citing new data from Scotland, Murphy said that the number of lung cancers due to asbestos exposures continued to be vastly underestimated. See: Asbestos and Cancer: Is it worse than we thought?
 

Wind Turbine Asbestos Contamination

Jun 5, 2026

Information contained in the article cited below was minimal and the fact that it was behind a pay wall was frustrating. Nevertheless, a post on LinkedIn which referenced the withheld article said that at least 56 turbines in Sweden had been discovered to contain asbestos in the emergency brakes of their service lifts. According to a statement from Jonas Lundmark of the Nordex Group: “All the lifts were shut down. No one was allowed to ride them, and then the brakes were replaced.” See [Subscription site]: Nordex tightens control as asbestos found in Swedish turbine lifts.
 

Corporate Chutzpah

Jun 4, 2026

In 2025, the Public Prosecution Service (OM) began a case against the former Dutch company Eternit over the asbestos deaths of three people; the OM accused Eternit of knowingly exposing employees to serious health risks by failing to safeguard workplace conditions. On May 29, 2026, Eternit’s lawyer Daan Doorenbos asked the Almelo Court to have the issue of limitation reviewed by the Supreme Court. “If the Supreme Court rules in my favor, there won’t be any case left” [to answer], he said. Operations at Eternit facilities in Europe, Asia, Latin & North America exposed countless workers to toxic exposures. The developments in the case are being closely watched in many jurisdictions. See: Company accused in asbestos deaths argues case should be dismissed as too old.
 

New Research: Toxic Toys

Jun 4, 2026

The first media reports regarding asbestos contamination of children’s toys in Slovenia were broadcast on May 21, 2026. The information in the article cited below was replicated in a TV broadcast which also featured taped interviews with Slovenian medical and scientific experts. According to the reports, only five types of toys were recalled by the Slovenian authorities. They included: a stretchable gorilla and a banana, both of which had been available in Slovenia for more than two years. In addition, several types of figurines and sand painting sets were also withdrawn. See: Igrace z azbestom: kaj smo našli v skritem nakupu? [Toys with asbestos: what did we find in a hidden purchase?].
 

Sale of Toxic Imports Continues

Jun 4, 2026

A May 27, 2026 article questioned why children’s sand products known to be contaminated with tremolite asbestos were still being sold in Japan by Amazon and other retailers. Reports of the toxic findings made by a Japanese laboratory were contained in a January 22 article by journalist Ibe Masayuki for Asia Press Network and other outlets. Concluding the text, Masayuki wrote: “Japan also needs to strengthen regulations so that even trace amounts of asbestos are considered a violation.” See: 子ども向け「遊び砂」のアスベスト混入 違反で3年以下の拘禁刑でも「分析しない」実態 [Asbestos contamination in children's “play sand”: Despite penalties of up to three years in prison for violations, the reality is that “analysis is not being conducted”].
 

Asbestos Exposures at Paris High School

Jun 4, 2026

On May 26, 2026, the SUD Education union raised the alarm over faulty asbestos management work at the Jean-Racine secondary school in Maintenon, Paris, despite reassurances by the Departmental Council. According to the union, structural repairs being carried out at the school without due diligence were creating hazardous conditions for both students and staff. See: Amiante au collège de Maintenon: SUD Education dénonce de récents travaux "sans repérage en profondeur" et "prévention" [Asbestos at the Maintenon middle school: SUD Education denounces recent work “without in-depth identification” and “prevention”].
 

Another Toxic Toy Recall

Jun 4, 2026

The May 26th headline cited below alerted New Zealanders to yet more toxic toys being sold at major retail outlets. Laboratory tests conducted on products sold by the Planet Fun brand detected chrysotile and tremolite asbestos contamination in Funkee Monkee Mega PDQ, Funkee Animalz Puppies Mega PDQ, Funkee Animalz Axolotl Mega PDQ, Funkee Pig Jumbo and Secret Menu Stretchee Foodz Asst PDQ. The toys were sold at The Warehouse and Farmers from January 2025 to April 2026, and Toyworld and Paper Plus from February 2025 to April 2026. See: Asbestos found in kids’ toys sold at major chains prompts urgent recall.
 

Asbestos Legacy Lives On

Jun 4, 2026

The town of Libby, Montana became notorious for the high incidence of asbestos-related disease due to decades of vermiculite mining operations by the US company WR Grace. After years of decontamination work by the EPA, the town is trying to rebrand itself as a tourist attraction, using its wonderful scenery and natural resources such as Lake Koocanoosa to attract visitors. Unfortunately, this exercise is being compromised by Libby’s history and “reputation as asbestos central.” See: A Montana Town Grapples With Its Past While Paving a Way Forward.
 

Asbestos in Toys!

Jun 2, 2026

At a May 28th Seoul press conference, the results of tests conducted in Japan and Korea of colored sand products bought in Korea were announced. Fifty per cent of the items were found to be contaminated with tremolite asbestos. The toxic products were made in South Korea and China. Commenting on the results Choi Ye-yong, Director of the Citizens’ Center for Environmental Health, called on the government to ban sales of asbestos-containing colored sand products, issue recalls and decontaminate affected premises. See: [보고서 501호] 어린이 문구 색모래 제품에서 1급발암물질 석면검출, 조사결과발표 [Report No. 501] Class 1 Carcinogen Asbestos Detected in Children's Stationery Colored Sand Products; Investigation Results Announced].