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					 			      	What Is Ship Breaking? - National Geographic Channel
					 			      	 
					                  	We uncover more about modern-day ship breaking and find out how the dangerous work is actually done.
					                  	http://www.natgeotv.com.au/people/what-is-ship-breaking.aspx
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Fornaes Shipbreaking Company
					 			      	 
					                  	Fornaes Shipbreaking in Grenaa, Denmark scraps ships and sells used ships equipment.
					                  	http://www.fornaes.dk/english/company.php
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Ship-breaking: A Hazardous Work
					 			      	 
					                  	Shipbreaking has grown into a major occupational and environmental health problem in the world. It is amongst the most dangerous of occupations, with unacceptably high levels of fatalities, injuries and work-related diseases.
					                  	http://www.ilo.org/safework/areasofwork/hazardous-work/WCMS_110335/lang--en/index.htm
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Dirty, Dangerous, and Deadly: The Shipbreaking Yards of Bangladesh
					 			      	 
					                  	Atlas Obscura on Slate is a new travel blog. Like us on Facebook, Tumblr, or follow us on Twitter @atlasobscura. The beaches of Chittagong are a massive graveyard for decommissioned ships and tankers. After plowing through the ocean for decades, their battered, rusting hulls sit fully exposed on the sand.
					                  	http://www.slate.com/blogs/atlas_obscura/2013/10/02/dirty_dangerous_and_deadly_the_shipbreaking_yards_of_bangladesh.html
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Visiting the Deadly Ship-Breaking Yards of Bangladesh - VICE News
					 			      	 
					                  	Shipbreaking Platform, an NGO which advocates for laborers' rights, has called the work disgusting and awful for its workers.
					                  	https://news.vice.com/article/visiting-the-deadly-ship-breaking-yards-of-bangladesh
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Where Giant Cargo Ships Go to Die - VICE - United States
					 			      	 
					                  	The ship breakers of Bangladesh turn immense vessels into scrap metal.
					                  	http://www.vice.com/video/bangladeshi-shipbreakers-815
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	The Ship Breakers Of Bangladesh - CBS News
					 			      	 
					                  	Ship Breaking Industry Arrived In Bangladesh By Accident, Literally.
					                  	http://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-ship-breakers-of-bangladesh/
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Shipbreaking in Bangladesh
					 			      	 
					                  	Information and resources regarding Ship breaking. Benefits, Environmental Pollution and Human Rights concern of Ship Breaking Industry.
					                  	http://www.shipbreakingbd.info
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	The Ship Breakers - The Atlantic
					 			      	 
					                  	Modern steel-hulled ships are built to last for several decades. After their useful life is over, more than 90 percent of ocean-going container ships end up on the shores of India, Pakistan, Indonesia, or Bangladesh, where labor is cheap, demand for steel is high, and environmental regulations are lax.
					                  	http://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2014/11/the-ship-breakers/100859/
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	The Ship-Breakers
					 			      	 
					                  	In Bangladesh men desperate for work perform one of the world's most dangerous jobs.
					                  	http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2014/05/shipbreakers/gwin-text
					 			         
					                  
						          
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					 			      	Ship Breaking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
					 			      	 
					                  	Ship breaking or ship demolition is a type of ship disposal involving the breaking up of ships for either a source of parts, which can be sold for re-use, or for the extraction of raw materials, chiefly scrap. It may also be known as ship dismantling, ship cracking, ship recycling, or ship disposal. Modern ships have a lifespan of a 25-30 years before corrosion, metal fatigue and a lack of parts render it uneconomical to run.
					                  	https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_breaking