Asbestos illegally dumped 281 times in five years

9 hours ago 4
Chattythat Icon

Niall McCracken

BBC News NI Mid Ulster reporter

BBC A sign behind a wire fence. The sign has a white background - red text reads "KEEP OUT" and below it in black text "Asbestos"BBC

There have been more than 280 illegal asbestos dumping incidents in Northern Ireland

Asbestos has been illegally dumped 281 times in Northern Ireland since 2019, BBC News NI can reveal.

Asbestos was used in building materials until it was discovered that inhalation of fibres could cause cancers, but it is only considered dangerous when it is moved.

It is illegal to put asbestos in household waste and is supposed to be removed by specialist contractors to be disposed of at a licensed hazardous waste site.

The Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) said the latest figures showed waste crime still posed "a serious threat to our environment and to public health".

A graphic showing key figures about asbestos dumping. On the left hand side there is an image of a piece of yellow tape with black text reading "Danger Asbestos". On the right hand side the figures are broken down.
-281 asbestos waste dumping incidents since 2019
-699 asbestos-related deaths since 2014
-£40m in asbestos illnesses compensation since 2011

Millions of pounds have been paid out through government compensation schemes

Widespread problem

There have been more than 3,000 illegal dumping incidents recorded across Northern Ireland between 2019 and 2024 with material including everything from scrap metal to tyres.

But new figures obtained by BBC News NI showed that, after mixed waste and general construction waste, asbestos was the most common illegally-dumped material in Northern Ireland.

The law in Northern Ireland states that a licensed removal contractor must be used to dispose of asbestos, but it can often be an expensive process.

A bar graph showing the type of materials in waste dumping incidents - at the top is mixed waste with about 1,400 incidents, followed by
-Construction, 600
-Asbestos, 281
-Tyres
-Animal
-Liquid
-Compost
-Fuel laundering waste 
-Hazardous waste
-Scrap metal
-Japanese knotweed

There have been more than 3,000 illegal waste dumping incidents in NI since 2019

Failure to dispose of asbestos legally can result in prosecution and it is also the legal responsibility of the landowner to secure their land to prevent any illegal waste dumping.

Antrim and Newtownabbey Council Area had the highest number of illegal asbestos dumping incidents, with 44 recorded since 2019.

In 2022 MPs called for a 40-year deadline for all asbestos to be removed from public and commercial buildings.

Alan Lewis, a director at G&L consultancy in Northern Ireland, a company in Northern Ireland that provides asbestos management and removal services, said a lot of time and effort went into making asbestos removal safe.

"[We use] full enclosure air locks, negative pressure units, to keep the fibres within the area you're working in and drawing them out safely," he said.

"All asbestos waste needs to be packaged, labelled, taken from site and taken to the appropriate hazard waste disposal site."

Reacting to the asbestos dumping figures he said: "Those numbers are high and I understand why people are concerned.

"When it comes to illegal dumping, you could have situations where asbestos is being transported and not contained properly, broken up on transit and dumped on the side of the road."

A graphic describing what asbestos is and explaining the affects it can have. It explains asbestos is a fibre-like material and has been banned in the UK since 1999. It says if material containing asbestos is damaged it can release a fine dust that contains asbestos fibres which can enter the lungs and damage them over time if breathed in. This can lead to serious health problems.

Asbestos was used in building materials until it was discovered that inhalation of fibres could cause cancers

A spokesperson for the Health and Safety Executive Northern Ireland said the removal of asbestos was considered "a specialist activity which requires planning, surveying and assessing".

Long-term, high-level exposure is needed to cause asbestosis and long-term, low-level inhalation exposure may cause lung disorders, such as asbestos-related cancer - mesothelioma.

Symptoms of mesothelioma can take decades to develop, and it is almost always fatal.

'Shocking'

The charity Mesothelioma UK said the latest figures on the illegal dumping of asbestos were "extremely concerning".

"We urge the UK government to establish a national task force to review and address every aspect of our shameful asbestos legacy," chief executive Liz Darlison said.

"The UK has the highest incidence of mesothelioma in the world, it is preventable and safe management and disposal of asbestos is at the root of the problem."

Between 2014 and 2023, there were 699 asbestos-related deaths in Northern Ireland.

Niamh Hagan's father died in 2022 soon after being diagnosed with mesothelioma.

Rodgers family Tony Rodgers with his wife and daughters on one of their wedding days. Tony has short grey hair and is wearing a formal wedding suit with a black suit jacket over a grey waistcoat, silver tie and white shirt. One of his daughters has blonde hair and is wearing a white wedding dress. Two of the others at each side of the photo have short brown hair and are wearing maroon bridesmaid dresses. His wife, second from right, has shoulder-length dark brown hair and is wearing a pink dress and a pink fascinator.Rodgers family

Tony Rodgers died after asbestos exposure

Tony Rodgers had worked as a social worker all his life and his family said they had difficulty pinpointing any obvious exposure to asbestos.

"It really came as shock for our whole family when we found out that the type of cancer dad had was almost always caused by exposure to asbestos," Ms Hagan said.

Niamh Hagan has shoulder-length dark brown hair and is wearing a striped red and white top. She is sitting in a kitchen, behind her white kitchen units and an oven built into the wall can be seen.

Niamh Hagan said the asbestos dumping figures made her angry

She said the amount of asbestos being illegally-dumped was disgraceful.

"As someone who has lost one of the people I loved most in the world because of an asbestos-related illness, those statistics just make me cross, it's shocking," she said.

"It's scary to think that there are places where this dangerous material is just being dumped and members of the public aren't aware aware of it, that anybody could just stumble across."

Read Entire Article