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Indian firms exporting toxic paint to neighbours (Bangladesh & Nepal)

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This post there should have been the end of the discussion. Its not something which only evil Indian companies do. Every other firm in the world takes advantage of laxer controls.

Think about cars, in Europe or Australia you can't sell cars without standard safety equipment on board. Yet the same car companies sell cars without those safety features as standard in countries like India and Bangladesh, no one seems to care about that, cause prize would go up. Same with the paint.


Make your rules and standards more stringent. Simples.

You're Right. VW markets POLO in India as "The car of the year", but Indian POLO is equal to European POLO only in shape.
 
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What are you appending youtubes about?

What is the connection?

Since you also boast about Bangladesh, though this a trifle off topic, but this should clear your and the other compatriots of yours fundamentals.

April 25, 2009

So India has influence on pretty much everything we do. The way we dress, what we eat, what we buy, what we watch etc etc. . .the list goes on. That’s for the Bangladeshi population though but what about the rest of the world? Well, obviously India is known all over the world. .thanks to Bollywood and butter chicken! But how does what affect us? Trust me it does and no one knows better than me.
4 years living in North America I had to correct the people saying “I am NOT Indian, I am Bangladeshi!” Just because we have the same complexion and dress the same way does not make us Indian. Gosh! (ok, I did not overreact) but sometimes it was aggravating going all “National Geographic” and “Discovery” on people while trying to explain them where Bangladesh was located and that it was a different country.
I recall a conversation between me and my grade 9 Biology teacher. She was nicely bonding with me over a Bollywood movie and told me how much she loved Shahrukh Khan. I knew what she was talking about but at the same time I knew exactly what she was thinking- she thought I was Indian. I went on talking but I had to correct her, I told her I was Bangladeshi. She looked a little embarrassed (poor her, that wasn’t my intention though) and told me she knew Bangladeshis in her university. (Phew, at least she knew the country!) . At the end of school year most of my classmates and teachers knew where Bangladesh was (Yay! Mission accomplished) but I guess I celebrated too soon. On my graduation day, when they were reading what the graduates would do after school . .mine went something like this ” and Fariba will go to college in her homeland PAKISTAN!” (SERIOUSLY!) arrggg.
The Indian Impact

You are so advanced and some you claim your are a new power rising in the east (as per a thread), imagine Bangladeshi are mistaken as either Indians or Pakistanis!!


So, it sure it time for you to smell the coffee!
 
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Haire kolkatar bangal... jara mehomander bole khaye asechen naki jaye khaben r mishti kine manush hisabe ... tara kina kolkata airport dekhate aseche.

That was in 2008, work on new terminal is on, and its going on at a pretty brisk pace.

5bb709.jpg

a2uq0.jpg



And here's the latest construction pic.

5836235462_ae64605c71_b.jpg


5835633759_729f2703bc_b.jpg


5836213930_b1b0a8440d_b.jpg


So keep up!. :wave:
 
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why there is a deliberate attempt to divert topics from your so called kolkata airport....

As usual weaselling out!

Check Post # 25 your query will get answered!!

And they your posting a youtube without audio on a News X and then the collage of Kolkata airport which had nothing to do with even what I wrote.

And you have the gall to ask me on Kolkata airport?

Kolkata is not a so called airport. It was there before there was anything called a Dacca airport!
 
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Indian paint majors have toxic double standards: NGO

The Hindu : News / National : Indian paint majors have toxic double standards: NGO

Indian paint majors are showing their true colours in neighbouring markets, by including dangerously high levels of lead in their products, according to a study conducted by some non-governmental organisations in India, Nepal and Bangladesh.

The Hindu Indian paint majors are showing their true colours in neighbouring markets, by including dangerously high levels of lead in their products, according to a study conducted by some non-governmental organisations in India, Nepal and Bangladesh.

Study finds higher levels of lead in Nepal, Bangladesh

Indian paint majors are showing their true colours in neighbouring markets, by including dangerously high levels of lead in their products, according to a study conducted by some non-governmental organisations in India, Nepal and Bangladesh.

For example, Asian Paints' Golden Yellow shade of paint contains only 90 ppm (parts per million) of lead in India, meeting international standards. In Nepal, it contained 190 ppm of lead, exceeding global safety norms, but meeting Indian standards. However, in Bangladesh, the same shade of paint contained a whopping 43,600 ppm of lead.

Similarly, Berger Paints' Golden Yellow paint has 17,200 ppm of lead in India – well above any safety limits – but almost 2.12 lakh ppm in Nepal. In Bangladesh, the same shade contains 1.22 lakh ppm of lead, but Berger Paints India has no equity stake in its Bangladeshi counterpart, although they share the same parent brand.

The claim that top paint manufacturers are marketing toxic products in countries with laxer standards - even while phasing them out in India - is found in the report titled “Double Standard - Investigating Lead Content In Leading Enamel Paint Brands In South Asia”.

Collaborative effort

The report was a collaborative effort by Toxics Link, India, the Center for Public Health and Environment Development, Nepal, and the Environment and Social Development Organization, Bangladesh.

The study examined 27 paint samples of common brands from Nepal, India and Bangladesh for their lead content. Apart from Asian Paints and Berger, which have manufacturing facilities in Bangladesh and Nepal, the study also examined samples from ICI and Nerolac, which largely export their products from India to neighbouring countries, and did not show such a wide differential.

In a statement, Berger Paints India insisted that it has switched to lead-free formulations, and suggested that the study's results may have come from older samples. The study shows that the samples had manufacturing dates between February 2009 and July 2010.

However, Berger admitted that products in neighbouring countries still contained lead. “It is expected that Berger will be able to totally change to lead free formulations in Nepal in a short span of two to three months,” said the statement, adding that Berger Bangladesh expects to be lead-free within six months.

Despite repeated attempts by phone and email, Asian Paints did not respond to these allegations.

In recent years, lead has been phased out or restricted in many consumer products due to serious health impacts, especially in children and fetuses. The United States has enforced a lead limit of 90 ppm in paint. While India does not have any mandatory norms, the voluntary limit has been set at 1,000 ppm. Neither Nepal nor Bangladesh have any safety standard, mandatory or otherwise.

The study found that 63 per cent of the samples exceeded the American safety limit, while 44 per cent exceeded the Indian limit.

Urging the region's multinational paint majors to end their toxic double standards, the NGOs behind the study also called on governments to swiftly bring enforceable standards to safeguard the health of their children.
i think u should thank HINDU MEDIA tht atleast they r fighting for ur people by going against Indian companies unlike ur own media who busy in spreading fake propoganda against whole INDIA
 
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That was in 2008, work on new terminal is on, and its going on at a pretty brisk pace.

5bb709.jpg

a2uq0.jpg



And here's the latest construction pic.

5836235462_ae64605c71_b.jpg


5835633759_729f2703bc_b.jpg


5836213930_b1b0a8440d_b.jpg


So keep up!. :wave:

How much your 2000 cr rupee stand.... 500 million usd at best... but for your knowledge in bd already there is a plan for $7.5 billion airport to replace the present dhaka airport. There are some confusion with the land but all will be fixed soon. n it will be the most expensive airport in the whole south asia. now you should keep up...
 
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^ do you know the difference between an integrated terminal and whole airport + infra? Also let your "plan" to materialize first.

And i'm still waiting for you to thrill mw with your superior quality bd dramas, this time dont run away like you always do!
 
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Check Delhi, Bangalore and other airports and eyes will pop.

But back to paints>
 
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All should protest by stopping painting the house. Let the companies learn a lesson.
 
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How much your 2000 cr rupee stand.... 500 million usd at best... but for your knowledge in bd already there is a plan for $7.5 billion airport to replace the present dhaka airport. There are some confusion with the land but all will be fixed soon. n it will be the most expensive airport in the whole south asia. now you should keep up...

Whatever?!?!
But make sure you use BD paints in that fancy airport. Even lime-wash is healthy enough to be used; lead-free and keeps mosquitoes and cockroaches away. Great environment-friendly product. And if people choose to lick or chew that paint, works as a calcium supplement.
 
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How much your 2000 cr rupee stand.... 500 million usd at best... but for your knowledge in bd already there is a plan for $7.5 billion airport to replace the present dhaka airport. There are some confusion with the land but all will be fixed soon. n it will be the most expensive airport in the whole south asia. now you should keep up...
Waow congrates..:mmm can we provide paint for tht airport....
 
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