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I tackled PCB, Dioxin and Furan toxicity in some depth a while back
(bear in mind there are orders of magnitude difference of alleged toxicity between these closely related and often co-present compounds/contaminants, and again in the different sub-types of the compounds, the levels of which can only be assessed with specialist testing) and what I found was that industry will tell you they are low-grade toxicity and cite a ton of scientific study and environmentalists will tell you they are the ultimate toxin and cite an equal amount of scientific study. I certainly wouldn't disregard material just because its blatantly out to scaremonger. What about all the anti-tobacco ads telling you smoking gives you cancer - are they spinning BS just because they're out to scare you? Acute poisoning (enough to cause chloracne for example) means taking on a *gargantuan* dose of these types of compounds compared with what is reckoned to be a 'tolerable daily intake' (TDI), and the levels that cause concern to professional health bodies like the World Health Organisation are vanishingly small (single figure picograms) and it is carcinogenic, teratogenic (birth defects) and immune disorders far down the line (even in future generations who inherit damaged genes) that they are worried about, not acute exposure toxicity. Its difficult getting a decent professional opinion by looking at industry or environmentalist sourced material, as in my experience they are equally biased, but I think it is reasonable to accept the view of a body like the W.H.O, that class Dioxin like PCB's as potentially very dangerous substances (and known carcinogens) and impose such strict limits on human exposure. My area of experience was with dealing with teensy-weensy amounts of this stuff. The difference in amounts from a waste incinerator (and diffused) per year and what is *potentially* contained in a few capacitors is like comparing a hand-grenade to a small nuke in terms of concentration and yield. They could contain millions of maximum permissible lifetime doses. PCB's and the like do biodegrade but can take years to do so, all the while hanging around in your fatty tissues, doing whatever it is they are doing (or not doing, depending on your affiliations). Even taking the middle ground between the industry view and environmentalist view, the *possible* risks would put me off touching the stuff or taking any risks with it at all, but thats my personal opinion. |