Environmental Pollution
Pollution is the largest environmental cause of disease and premature death in the world, accounting for three times more deaths in 2015 than AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined, according to a global study published in The Lancet medical journal in USA Today News. The Lancet is a weekly peer-reviewed general medical journal which concludes that pollution endangers the stability of the Earth's support systems and threatens the continuing survival of human societies.
The commission report combined data from the World Health Organization and other sources to determine that air pollution is the biggest killer, leading to heart disease, stroke, lung cancer and other illnesses. Outdoor air pollution, caused by vehicles and industry, is blamed for 4.5 million deaths annually while indoor air pollution, from wood and dung stoves, is linked to 2.9 million deaths. Water pollution, often contaminated by sewage, is linked to 1.8 million deaths from gastrointestinal diseases and parasitic infections. Another 800,000 deaths are tied to workplace pollution, including exposure to toxins, carcinogens and second-hand tobacco smoke, coal-related diseases and bladder cancer in dye workers.
Amid the gloom, the report highlights some good news — much of the pollution can be eliminated. Some countries have produced laws and regulations mandating clean air and clean water, established chemical safety policies and curbed the most flagrant forms of pollution. Health in such countries have improved and people in these countries are living longer. To tackle the pollution problem, we need to continue making pollution prevention a high priority nationally and internationally and integrating it into country and city planning processes. This means we need to do more and put actions in place to reduce pollution in every way possible starting with waste reduction.
We Are Committed To Protect And Enhance Our Environment
What We Offer ?
For waste recycling innovation, one of our aims is to optimise paper waste by recycling it and turning it into different products that can be reused in applications where plastics are conventionally used and sell it to relevant end users. For example fan blade made out of plastic. We have come up with creative solution replacing plastic or expensive metal fan blade with a strong composite (cardboard paper + epoxy). The cardboard acts as traditional finer element in the composite and the eco-epoxy material as the matrix. See more under "About" section.