Lebanon explosion is an ecosocialist issue

August 10, 2020
Issue 
Aftermath of the Beirut port explosion. Photo: Flickr Creative Commons

In saying that the terrible explosion in Beirut is an ecosocialist issue, I am not counterposing this claim to the fact that this is also an issue of corruption, of government incompetence, of health and safety and many other things. I am making the point that, like COVID-19 and climate change, it is a symptom of the utterly distorted, toxic and disastrous relationship between human society and nature, our environment, which capitalism has brought about.

Coal, oil and gas companies have been plying their deadly trade, without regard for its impact on the environment and hence on humans. Innumerable capitalist companies are filling the oceans with plastic, poisoning rivers and water supplies, depositing damaging waste materials in dumps near to centres of human population around the world.

Dumping ground

Similarly, the system and its various profit driven components are busy transporting potentially deadly cargoes across the oceans of the world, with a view to unloading them in the Global South where, they hope, no questions will be asked.

There is no need for special research or investigative journalism to reveal the utterly scandalous nature of what has happened. The barest facts, already in the public domain, are more than enough to point both to the shocking practices involved in this particular case and to the everyday nature of these practices in a capitalist world of international profit maximisation.

Let鈥檚 start with how dangerous the ammonium nitrate that exploded is. : 鈥淲hen ammonium nitrate explodes, it can release toxic gases including nitrogen oxides and ammonia gas.

鈥淭he orange plume is caused by the nitrogen dioxide, which is often associated with air pollution.

鈥淚f there isn鈥檛 much wind, it could become a danger to the people nearby.

鈥淥n its own, ammonium nitrate is relatively safe to handle. However, if you have a large amount of material lying around for a long time, it begins to decay.

鈥淭he real problem is that, over time, it will absorb little bits of moisture and it eventually turns into an enormous rock. This makes it more dangerous because, if a fire reaches it, the chemical reaction will be much more intense.鈥

Trevor Lawrence, Senior Lecturer and expert in explosives and munitions at Cranfield University : 鈥淧oorly stored ammonium nitrate is notorious for explosions 鈥 for example: in Oppau, Germany; in Galveston Bay, Texas; and more recently at West in Waco, Texas and Tianjin in China.

鈥淓xplosions are typically detonations that cause huge damage due to the supersonic shockwave, which is clearly visible in the videos.

鈥淒etonation of ammonium nitrate does not require additional fuel but is often set off by an initial fire, which then causes the bulk material to blow.

鈥淭he orange plume above the explosion site is due to nitrogen dioxide, the toxic air pollution gas, and is a tell-tale sign of a nitrate-based explosion.

鈥淭he idea that such a quantity would have been left unattended for six years beggars belief and was an accident waiting to happen.鈥

鈥淚t is used widely in fertilisers and also commonly as an oxidiser in home-made explosives. Normally it needs the addition of a fuel to produce an explosive, but under some circumstances it can detonate.鈥

: 鈥淚n 1921, about 4,500 tonnes of ammonium nitrate caused an explosion at a plant in Oppau, Germany, killing more than 500 people.

鈥淭he deadliest industrial accident in US history occurred in 1947 at Galveston Bay, Texas. At least 581 people were killed when more than 2000 tonnes of the chemical detonated onboard a ship which had docked in the port.

鈥淢ore recently, an explosion involving ammonium nitrate and other chemicals killed 173 people in in 2015.鈥

So how did this deadly cargo get to Beirut?

The BBC reported that the Lebanese government 鈥渉as not named the source of the ammonium nitrate, but the same amount of the chemical arrived in Beirut in November 2013 on a Moldovan-flagged cargo ship, the MV Rhosus鈥.

The frightening implication of this is that it is certainly possible that there was more than one ship carrying thousands of tons of ammonium nitrate that came to Beirut. Was it perhaps a regular occurrence?

The BBC reported: 鈥淭he Russian-owned vessel , heading to Beira, Mozambique.

So it was Russian-owned but under a Moldovan flag. Why was it going to Mozambique? The overwhelmingly likely answer is that it was going to Mozambique because that was somewhere where no questions would be asked. As the story continues, it becomes almost surreal.

According to a 2015 report for shipping industry newsletter , written by Lebanese lawyers who represented the MV Rhosus crew, while sailing through the eastern Mediterranean, the Rhosus suffered 鈥渢echnical problems鈥 and was forced to dock at Beirut鈥檚 port.

The Rhosus was inspected by port officials and 鈥渇orbidden from sailing鈥, the lawyers said. Most of the crew were repatriated, except for the Russian captain, Boris Prokoshev, and three others.

Prokoshev told Reuters on August 7 that , and that it was sent to Beirut by its owner to take on an additional cargo of heavy equipment because of financial difficulties.

Cargo impounded

Note, the Rhosus, with 2700 tonnes of deadly explosive on board, suffered 鈥渢echnical problems鈥 鈥 in other words, it was leaking. Note also, the claim of the captain: 鈥淚t was leaking but seaworthy at the time鈥. And, it was sent to Beirut by its owner 鈥渢o take on an additional cargo of heavy equipment鈥.

Prokoshev then said: 鈥淗owever, the crew could not load the equipment safely, and when the ship鈥檚 owner failed to pay the port fees, the Lebanese authorities impounded it.鈥

In other words, if the owner had paid the port fees, it might well not have been impounded but allowed to continue on its reckless journey to Mozambique.

Shortly afterwards, according to The Arrested, the Rhosus was 鈥渁bandoned by her owners after charterers and cargo concern lost interest in the cargo鈥.

They 鈥渓ost interest鈥 in the cargo. And what about the crew who were at risk of their lives every minute they were on board?

Meanwhile, the crew still confined to the vessel were running out of food and supplies. The lawyers said they applied to the Judge of Urgent Matters in Beirut for an order authorising them to return home, emphasising 鈥渢he danger the crew was facing given the 鈥榙angerous鈥 nature of the cargo鈥 in the ship鈥檚 holds. [My emphasis]

So, everybody 鈥 the owners, the captain, the crew, the Port Authority and Lebanese officials 鈥 knew they were sitting on a time bomb, but when there was no longer money to be made, they just 鈥渓ost interest鈥.

Negligence

Obviously, there are Lebanese officials who were deeply negligent (maybe they were paid to be negligent), are culpable and must be held to account. But, equally obviously, these particular negligent and culpable officials are merely the tip of an iceberg of such negligent culpability.

It is the routineness of it all that stands out. How many unsafe ships of dubious ownership, under false flags, are sailing our oceans, polluting them as they go, endangering their desperate crews and threatening lives in every port they enter? Obviously the question cannot be given a definite answer, but it is likely to be many thousands.

In a way, the story of the MV Rhosus and the catastrophe in Beirut is a hideous metaphor for the behaviour of our whole profit-driven system of international capitalism, which in its institutionalised negligence is set to destroy 鈥 not one port, hundreds of lives and thousands of homes 鈥 but innumerable ports and coastal regions, vast areas of agricultural land and the lives of countless millions in the not-distant future.

That is why the Lebanese explosion is an ecosocialist issue. Because we must heal the rift with our environment, stop treating it as a limitless dumping ground for deadly toxins, or die.

[Abridged from .]

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