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The ‘Clean’ Technology That’s Poisoning People

The Daily

2025/12/02
The Daily

The Daily

2025/12/02

Shownote

Lead is an essential but toxic element of car batteries. The U.S. auto industry promotes the recycling of it as an environmental success story. An investigation by The New York Times and The Examination reveals that the initiative comes at a major human co...

Highlights

The recycling of lead from car batteries is often celebrated as a green success story in the U.S. auto industry. But behind this narrative lies a hidden global trail of pollution, exploitation, and health crises that stretch far beyond American borders. An investigative journey uncovers how recycled lead moves from dangerous, unregulated processing sites in Nigeria into major U.S. supply chains—raising urgent questions about corporate responsibility and environmental justice.
07:27
Workers in Nigeria break car batteries with machetes, no protective gear, contaminating communities.
19:46
Audit recommendations don't compel action, leaving ethical risks unaddressed
22:45
A school in Ogijo had 1,900 parts per million of lead, far higher than a previous U.S. disaster.
26:00
The government has known about lead-related health issues since 2018 but lacks enforceable standards to force corporate action
32:46
Travelers without Real ID must pay $45 to fly starting February 1st

Chapters

How toxic lead from Nigeria ends up in American car batteries
00:00
When corporate responsibility meets a broken recycling chain
17:16
The human toll of lead: brain damage and poisoned communities
22:45
Why safety rules fail in Nigeria’s shadowy battery industry
26:00
What would it take to clean up a dirty but essential recycling system
32:46

Transcript

Peter S. Goodman: What happens when an ancient rose farm in France becomes an open sky laboratory? And how can a cosmetology program in India offer a road to economic empowerment? Hi there, I'm Isabella Rossellini, and in the latest episode of This Is Not ...