![]() Return to the Article |
The signal came in a Feb. 17 New York Times editorial entitled, "That Newfangled Light Bulb."
The editorial read, in part, "Across the world, consumers are being urged to... switch to [CFLs]... Now the question is how to dispose of [CFLs] once they break or quit working... each [CFL] has a tiny bit of a dangerous toxin... almost 300 million CFLs were sold in the U.S. last year. That is already a lot of mercury to throw in the trash and the amounts will grow ever larger in coming years... the dangers are real and growing."
The Times continued, "Businesses and government recyclers need to start working on more efficient ways to deal with that added mercury. Ellen Silbergeld, a professor of environmental health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore , is raising the cry about the moment when millions of these light bulbs start landing in landfills or incinerators all at once. The pig in the waste pipeline, she calls it." [....]
Until the Times editorial, the activists and the media had been holding back their customary attacks against mercury-containing fluorescent light bulbs.
Today's business leaders apparently have forgotten the infamous Superfund program that needlessly and retroactively imposed tens of billions of dollars of costs for pre-1980 waste disposal practices regardless of whether they were legal at the time.