Asbestos has a risk of cancer, especially related to lung cancer and mesothelioma. At least 107,000 people died of asbestos exposure every year. 66 countries including Japan, South Korea, and Canada have banned asbestos. However, some countries still use it. Why is the deadly asbestos industry still alive and well?

At least 107,000 people died of asbestos exposure every year

What is asbestos?

Asbestos is a general term for a class of silicate minerals that can be stripped into long and thin fibers. It refers to certain types of chrysotile and amphibole.

Asbestos is the only natural mineral fibre. Asbestos fiber is very thin, smooth, elastic, and resistant to fire, with a diameter of less than 0.003 mm. These properties make asbesto useful, but also expose its toxicity.

Asbestos has been used by humans for over 4,500 years. The earliest record was that it was used as a shroud for the Egyptian mummies. Then it was used worldwide as a building material. In 1987, asbestos was recognized as a class of carcinogens.

What does asbestos look like?

EPA defines 6 mineral types as ¡°asbestos¡± that fall into two categories: amphibole and serpentine.

Amphibole asbestos fibers have a straight, jagged shape, including amosite, crocidolite, tremolite, anthophyllite and actinolite. Serpentine asbestos fibers are curly and there is only one type of chrysotile.

Asbestos color

According to the asbestos color, types of asbestos are divided into white asbestos, brown asbestos and blue asbestos.

1. White asbestos (Chrysotile)

White asbestos is the most commonly used asbestos, accounting for 95% of asbestos in American buildings. The common uses were asbestos walls, asbestos sheeting, asbestos roof, asbestos siding, asbestos tile, asbestos pipe, etc.