Incident At Bhopal Essay

While the free essays can give you inspiration for writing, they cannot be used 'as is' because they will not meet your assignment's requirements. If you are in a time crunch, then you need a custom written term paper on your subject (incident at bhopal)
Here you can hire an independent writer/researcher to custom write you an authentic essay to your specifications that will pass any plagiarism test (e.g. Turnitin). Waste no more time!

To

examine the events contributing to the tragedy at Bhopal, India and their

repercussions and to draw conclusions based on these events.

  What

Happened at Bhopal? Reading newspaper and magazine articles written immediately

following the events at Bhopal, it is apparent that it took some time for

authorities to determine the causes of the industrial accident. Speculation

seems to have run wild for a time following the accident. Drawing from later

statistics and information seems to be a more reliable method of determining the

most likely scenario. Where various alternate feasible possibilities have been

presented, we will try to include the most likely. At approximately midnight on

December 3, 1984, an unexpected chemical reaction took place in a Union Carbide

of India Limited storage tank. The storage tank contained methyl isocyanate,

(hereafter referred to as MIC) a toxic gas used in the process of a pesticide

called Sevin.(1) As part of the distilling process there was an extremely high

concentration of chloroform present. This caused corrosion of the tank. The tank

being made of iron provided a catalyst for the reaction. A large amount of water

was also introduced, approximately 120-240 gallons, which in combination with

the chemical, generated enough heat to start the reaction. The runaway reaction

released an uncontrollable amount of heat and this resulted in 30-40 tons of the

gas being vaporized and spread over approximately 30 square miles, killing

thousands of people and injuring hundreds of thousands.(2) The lack of

information on MIC in 1984 made it a very toxic and difficult to control

substance, according to Meryl H. Karol of the University of Pittsburgh’s

Graduate School of Public Health. He says, “Although nominally a liquid at

room temperature, methyl isocyanate evaporates so quickly from an open container

that it easily turns into a colorless, odorless highly flammable and reactive

gas... I would hesitate having it in a laboratory.” He also quotes the OHSA

standard for exposure to MIC during an eight-hour day as 0.02 parts per million,

“far lower than what many Bhopal residents were exposed to.”(3) THE HEALTH

AFFECTS of exposure to MIC is disastrous. At low levels, MIC causes eyes to

water and results in damage to the cornea. At higher concentrations, muscles

constrict, and the bronchial passages have the equivalent of a severe asthma

attack.(3) Most of the deaths in India were due to this. Dr. Jeffrey P. Koplan,

Assistant Director of Public Health Practice at the Centers for Disease Control

in Atlanta, who went to Bhopal to render assistance, said, “There was edema,

substantial destruction...of alveolar walls, ... a ulcerative bronchiolus...”

among patients at the severely crowded hospitals.(4) Serious damage to the

central nervous system after three to four weeks, including paralysis, and

psychological problems have also been a result.(3) The long-term affects of MIC

exposure are equally disastrous. According to the Indian Council of Medical

Research, at least 50,000 people are still suffering and new chronic cases of

asthma keep showing up as the population ages and 39% of the surrounding

population have some form of severe respiratory impairment.(5) Most of them will

suffer for the rest of their lives.(6) It is a conservative estimate that 5

people die every week as a result of the Bhopal accident.(7) Another

consideration is that in a social class that maintains a living through physical

labor, inability to perform results in starvation.(8) Affects on women were

profound. Out of 198 women living within 10 miles of the facility, 100 had

abnormal uterine bleeding.(1,5) Of the local women who were pregnant before the

accident, 43% miscarried and 14% of the babies carried to term died within a

month. Socially, these women are considered unwanted by potential husbands

because reproductive disorders are so commonplace that they are seen as

sterile.(5) It is unknown whether chromosomal damage will affect future

generations.(8) TOTAL EFFECTS ON THE ENVIRONMENT are not yet known.

Approximately 1,600 animals died on the first and second days after the

incident. This was a terrible environmental health risk. Eventually this problem

was solved by digging a giant one-acre mass grave. There was also damage to some

vegetation, animal and fish species, but not to others. The Indian Council of

Agricultural Research is studying this.(1) A VARIETY OF FAILURES were

contributing factors in this lethal cloud of chemicals descending on the

helpless, uninformed public. These failures include design failures, maintenance

failures, operations failures, emergency response failures, communications

failures, governmental failures and last but not least management failures. In

1982, a safety audit by the Union Carbide parent company revealed a number of

safety problems. The conditions that did not measure up were problems with the

manual controls of the MIC feed tank, unreliable gauges and valves, and

insufficient training of the operators. The Union Carbide of India division

claimed to have fixed all of these, but management never had auditors go back

and confirm. Another inherent problem is that the storage tanks were too large.

They had a capacity of 15,000 gallons. The smallest amount of water introduced

into the system would cause an exothermic reaction such as the one which

occurred, on an extremely large scale, instead of on a smaller scale if the

tanks did not have such a high volume.(1) The parent company, according to Mr.

Jackson Browning, Union Carbide’s Director of...

The rest of the paper is available free of charge to our registered users. The registration process just couldn't be easier. Log in or register now. It is all free!
Avoiding Future Bhopals: In the Aftermath of Catastrophe, What Can We Learn
From History’s Worst Industrial Accident?” ENVIRONMENT, Vol. 27, Sept 1985,
p. 6-13. (2)“Environmental Surprise: Expecting the Unexpected.” Kates,
William. ENVIRONMENT, Vol. 38, March 1996, p. 6-7. (3)“Fallout From a Chemical
Catastrophe.” Peterson, Ivar. SCIENCE NEWS, Vol. 126, Dec 15, 1984, p. 372.
(4)“After Coping With Crisis, Medicine Ponders Sequelae.” Marwick, Dr.
Charles. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Vol. 253, April 12, 1985.
(5)“Persistently Toxic: The Union Carbide Accident In Bhopal Continues to
Harm.” Mukerjee, Modhusree. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, Vol. 272, June 1995, p. 16.
(6)“The Fallout From Bhopal.” Lepkowski, William. SCIENCE DIGEST. Vol. 94,
Jan 1986, p. 52. (7)“Union Carbide Officials Face Prosecution.” Kumar,
Sanjay. NEW SCIENTIST, Vol. 138, May 1, 1993, p. 8. (8)“BHOPAL: 15th
Anniversary.” WWW.Corpwatch.org/Bhopal. (9)“Bhopal: The Lesson Sinks In.”
THE ECONOMIST, Vol. 295, June 22, 1985, p. 91. (10)“Permanent Scars of the
Bhopal Catastrophe.” DISCOVER. Vol. 7, April 1986, p. 9. (11)”What We Can
Learn From Bhopal.”Speth, James. ENVIRONMENT, Vol. 27, Jan/Feb 1985, p 15.
(12)“Gassed in Bhopal.” THE ECONOMIST, Vol. 293, Dec 15, 1984, p. 12-14.
(13)“Poisoned Legacy.” THE ECONOMIST, Vol. 293, Dec 15, 1984, p. 77-78.
(14)“Union Carbide; Not Us.” THE ECONOMIST, Vol. 294, March 23, 1985, p.
78-79. (15)“New Labor Report on Bhopal Plant.” ENVIRONMENT, Vol. 27, Sept.
1985, p. 23. (16)“Bhopal: Ten Years On.” THE ECONOMIST, Vol. 333, Dec 1994,
p. 78-79.
You should cite this paper as follows:

MLA Style
. EssayMania.com. Retrieved on 24 May, 2012 from
    <http://essaymania.com/165560/incident-at-bhopal>

More College Papers

Hurricanes essay

Of all of natureÂ’s forces that exist hurricanes could be considered one of the most powerful of all these forces that can cause tremendous amounts of destruction is such a little amount of time. A hurricane is a powerful whirling storm of winds that measure 200-300

Hurricanes In Florida essay
According to the National Hurricane Center, a hurricane releases heat energy at a rate of 50 trillion to 200 trillion watts, which is equivalent to the energy from exploding 10 megaton bombs every 20 minutes. With such strength, it is no wonder why these natural disasters have such large destruct

Herbicide essay
Crop management is a vigorous activity that changes as technologies are developed. Now that were in the new millennium, we are finding new and enhanced ways to improve things that effect us in our everyday lives like, industrial pollution, car pollution, waste management, and also the advancement