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The red line that runs through Hungary after a massive sludge spill

Simon Leufstedt
Friday, 3 August, 2012
By Simon Leufstedt
1
Photo by Palíndromo Mészáros.
Photo by Palíndromo Mészáros.

In western Hunguary in October 2010 a retaining wall around a reservoir filled with toxic waste from an aluminum company burst open and released hundreds of thousands of cubic meters of deadly sludge. The stinking and toxic red sludge flooded the surrounding areas, rivers, and towns killing nine people and injuring hundreds with chemical burns.

Spanish photographer Palíndromo Mészaros has in a series of photos documented buildings, roads, and trees that were stained by a rust-red line after the two meter high toxic sludge had finally disappeared.

Photo by Palíndromo Mészáros.

The sludge contained heavy metals, including lead, and was slightly radioactive. If ingested it was toxic and could cause lung cancer if inhaled. All in all, an area of 40 square kilometers was affected by the Ajka alumina plant accident. Numerous villages had to be abandoned and the final clean-up bill ended at tens of millions of dollars. The head of the Ajka alumina plant was later arrested for criminal negligence and several employees at the plant were suspected of negligence in connection with the spill.

These photos were taken six months after the accident when, as Mészaros puts it, “the silence takes the place of the headlines and just The Line is left”. Mészaros “The Line” was exhibited at the Festival des Promenades Photographiques in Vendôme, France, last month.

Simon Leufstedt
Simon Leufstedt is the editor of Green Blog. Simon has previously studied Global Environmental Justice and is currently studying Human Ecology and Political Science at Lund University in Sweden. Simon is also blogging over at the Swedish 350 website and working with the Swedish TckTckTck organisation. You can follow Simon on Twitter and on Google+.
View all posts by Simon Leufstedt

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