A shipyard worker is enveloped in fumes coming off a separating wall he is cutting through with his blowtorch inside the hull of a ship being dismantled in one of the 127 ship-breaking plots in Gaddani, some 40Kms west of Karachi, Pakistan, on July 9, 2012. Gaddani's ship-breaking yards employ some 10,000 workers including welders, cleaners, crane operators and worker supervisors. The yards are one of the largest ship-breaking operations in the world rivaling in size those located in India and Bangladesh. It takes 50 workers about three months to break down a midsize average transport sea vessel of about 40,000 tonnes. The multimillion-dollar ship-breaking industry contributes significantly to the national supply of steel to Pakistani industries. For a six-day working week of hard and often dangerous work handling asbestos, heavy metals and PCBs, employees get paid about 300 USD a month of which half is spent on food and rent for run-down rickety shacks near the yards, a labor representative told AFP. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images)
A Pakistani worker pulls on a wire he will connect to a thick chain that will in turn be used to peel away a slab of the outer structure of a beached vessel in one of the 127 ship-breaking plots in Gaddani, Pakistan, on July 10, 2012. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images) #
Laborers pull an iron rope before separating a portion of a ship into scrap metal at Gaddani ship breaking yard, on November 25, 2011. (Reuters/Akhtar Soomro) #
Workers transport supplies to a ship by a makeshift cable carriage to separate it into scrap metal at the Gaddani shipbreaking yard early in the morning, on November 25, 2011. (Reuters/Akhtar Soomro) #
A laborer climbs a ladder held by others, while working onboard a ship, separating it into scrap metal at Gaddani ship breaking yard on November 24, 2011. (Reuters/Akhtar Soomro) #
Workers are seen through a cut part of a ship at a ship breaking yard in Chittagong, Bangladesh, on August 19, 2009. Bangladesh is dependent on ship breaking for its domestic steel requirements. (Reuters/Andrew Biraj) #
A laborer uses a gas blow torch to separate parts of a ship into scrap metal at the Gaddani ship breaking yard in Pakistan on November 25, 2011. (Reuters/Akhtar Soomro) #
Chittagong shipyard, Bangladesh. See it mapped. (© Google, Inc.) #
Alang shipyard, India. See it mapped. (© Google, Inc.) #
In this photograph taken on July 11, 2012, Pakistani shipyard workers remove oil barrels from inside the hull of a vessel beached and being dismantled at one of the 127 ship-breaking plots in Gaddani. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images) #
Laborers stand on a makeshift cable carriage which transports them onto a ship to separate it into scrap metal at Gaddani ship breaking yard on November 24, 2011. (Reuters/Akhtar Soomro) #
A Pakistani shipyard worker climbs an anchor chain securing a vessel beached and being dismantled at one of the ship-breaking plots in Gaddani on July 10, 2012. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images) #
Workers rest after work at a ship breaking yard in Chittagong, Bangladesh, on August 19, 2009. (Reuters/Andrew Biraj) #
An Indian worker breaks down ship parts for recycling as scrap at a ship breaking yard in Mumbai, India, on December 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool) #
A worker smiles at a shipbreaking yard in Cilincing, Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 23, 2010. (Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images) #
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The Ship Breakers - In Focus - The Atlantic
http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2014/11/the-ship-breakers/100859/
ship breaker - 拆船商
拆船商, 拆船業
http://terms.naer.edu.tw/detail/845376/
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