Clean-Up at Plant
Along Adriatic Coast Removes 300 Tons of Pesticide
August 31, 2006 — By Associated Press
TIRANA, Albania — More than 300 tons of
pesticides and other toxic chemicals considered a public health risk have
been removed from a communist-era chemical plant that has been closed for
15 years, authorities said Wednesday.
There is no indication that any chemicals from the vacant plant in Bishti
i Palles, 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of Tirana, have run off into the
Adriatic Sea, but some residents in the area have reported health
problems, and pesticides have entered the local water supply. The
chemicals have also affected agriculture in an area where 70 families
live.
Albania, one of Europe's poorest nations, has been trying to deal with the
problem of pollution from closed industrial plants.
The former state-run plant, which closed down after the fall of communism
in 1990, is located along the coastline of Durres Bay on the Adriatic, one
of the country's main tourist areas.
The clean-up at the plant was paid for with a euro2 million (US$2.56
million) grant from the Netherlands, the Dutch Embassy said.
A German company, Sava, transported the 320 tons of waste to Germany for
disposal.
Source: Associated Press