Beach-goers become victims to tumors and high mortality rates because of this dark secret.
Rosignano Solvay is a tourist haven. This southern Tuscany area boasts of brilliant white sand beaches that attract thousands of visitors every year. Little do they know, the glorious Caribbean-like white sands they frolic on actually hides a dark secret.
This picturesque Italian town’s main tourist attraction is its seemingly beautiful coastline of sparkling sand locals call Spiagge Bianche.
Swimmers and sunbathers remain unaware the sand is pure chemical waste, byproducts of the Rosignano Solvay chemical plant.
Rosignano Solvay began in 1912 when Belgian politician and industrialist Ernest Solvay brought his Solvay company to Italy. He established a production plant near Rosignano Marittimo, a town 25 kilometers from Livorno.
The huge factory brought in progress and development, and soon a new town sprung up around it, duly named Rosignano Solvay.
The plant specialized in chemical manufacturing, producing basic chemicals like sodium carbonate, bicarbonate, hydrogen peroxide, calcium chloride, and chlorine. Its premier product sodium carbonate, also known as soda ash, was manufactured using a chemical process Solvay himself invented.
The Solvay process, a breakthrough during its time, is currently used in almost all leading industrial plants around the world to produce sodium carbonate.
It involves bubbling carbon dioxide into a salt water solution (brine) and ammonia to precipitate the compound. The byproduct of this process includes a mixture of limestone and calcium chloride.
When the Solvay plant began its production back in the early 20th century, it dumped these by-products into the sea. These wastes eventually formed the beautiful white sand, or Spiagge Bianche, that covers the whole shore.
Looking very much like a tropical paradise, the calcium chloride and limestone dumpsite includes a whole host of toxic chemicals harmful to humans and animals: arsenic, ammonia, cadmium, chromium, lead, and mercury.
In 1999, the United Nations Environment Programme submitted a report pointing out Spiagge Bianche as among the most polluted coastal areas along the Mediterranean.
Alarmingly, the town has an abnormally high mortality rate compared to the regional average. Between 2008 and 2010, it recorded a 2.2 percent higher mortality rate for men, and an 8.3 percent higher mortality rate for women.
Despite this, there hasn’t been much awareness spread about the toxic wastes. Instead, Spiagge Bianche continues to be promoted as a tourist attraction, with ads declaring the waters safe for bathing and swimming.
Every year, the Foundation for Environmental Education awards the white beaches of Rosignano Solvay the “Blue Flag” for stringent standards of “cleanliness and quality.”
In the face of activists protesting against the multinational company, Solvay agreed to eliminate mercury and reduce their toxic waste discharges by 70 percent in 2003.
However, economic interests and bureaucracy play a huge role in the plant’s operations, and Solvay has been accused of going back on their promise.
Meanwhile, the town’s mortality rate remains high, and unaware tourists continue to flock by the thousands to the toxic white beaches of Rosignano Solvay.
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