[REDACTED] | |
Formation | 1999 |
---|---|
Type | International NGO |
Location | |
President | Richard Fuller |
Website | www.pureearth.org |
Pure Earth (originally Blacksmith Institute) is a New York City-based international nonprofit founded in 1999 that works to identify and address pollution-related issues in low- and middle-income countries. Pure Earth's work focuses on two key pollutants: lead and mercury.
The Global Lead Program works on reducing lead poisoning from three key sources poisoning millions of children in low- and middle-income countries: the unsafe and informal recycling of used lead-acid batteries, lead-glazed pottery, and contaminated spices.
The Global Mercury Program works to reduce mercury from artisanal and small scale gold mining communities around the world by training miners to go mercury-free, and helping miners in the Amazon rainforest restore land damaged by mining.
Pure Earth is known for the Toxic Sites Identification Program, a global movement to find and clean up some of the world's most toxic sites. The program has trained over 500 pollution investigators and 90 government representatives worldwide, who have identified and mapped over 5000 toxic hotspots in communities around the world. The data they collect has built an "unprecedented public database of toxic sites" that helps local communities and governments plan clean up to protect residents.
Pure Earth is also known for initiating the Global Alliance on Health and Pollution, which in turn led to the formation of The Lancet Commission on pollution and health and the publication of a report from the Lancet Commission on health and pollution concluding in 2017 that pollution is the largest environmental cause of death in the world, killing three times more people than AIDS/HIV, tuberculosis and malaria combined, and 15 times more than war and other forms of violence.
In 2015, Pure Earth advocated for broadening the scope of toxic pollution addressed in the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals. In 2020, Pure Earth and UNICEF issued an urgent call to protect 800 million children poisoned by lead, following the publication of their joint report: The Toxic Truth: Children’s exposure to lead pollution undermines a generation of potential. The report revealed that lead poisoning is affecting children on a massive and previously unknown scale – one in three children globally have elevated blood lead levels, and nearly half of them live in South Asia.
Pure Earth has been recognized by Charity Navigator as one of the United States' top performing nonprofits.
Pure Earth was formerly known as the Blacksmith Institute, which was recognized for a series of World's Worst Pollution Problems reports that first brought attention to the global pollution problem.
Pollution: Largest Environmental Cause of Death In The World Today
In 2017, Pure Earth President Richard Fuller and Dr. Philip Landrigan, serving as co-chairs of the Lancet Commission on Pollution and Health, issued an open letter, and presided over the release of the landmark report from the commission, which confirmed in 2017 that pollution is the largest environmental cause of disease and premature death in the world, causing 3 times as many deaths than HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria combined, and 15 times as many deaths as wars and all forms of violence combined.
The report's findings made headlines around the world. The Washington Post's editorial concluded that "The Lancet study should remind leaders in the United States and elsewhere that, though there are costs associated with restricting pollution, countries also incur costs by failing to do so." Fareed Zakaria issued a passionate commentary about pollution's deadly global impact.
The Lancet Commission on Pollution and Health is an initiative of The Lancet, the Global Alliance on Health and Pollution (for which Pure Earth serves as Secretariat), and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, with additional coordination and input from United Nations Environment, United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), and the World Bank.
Toxic Sites Identification Program
Pure Earth's Toxic Site Identification Program (TSIP) works to identify and screen contaminated sites in low- and middle-income countries where public health is at risk. Pure Earth has trained more than 400 toxic sites investigators around the world to find, map and assess polluted sites that pose health risks in their communities. To date, TSIP investigators have identified more than 3,100 sites in over 50 countries. These sites alone represent a potential health risk to more than 80 million poor people.
The data collected by TSIP investigators is entered into Pure Earth's database of polluted sites, the largest database of its kind. This information is made accessible to governments so that they can formulate plans to prioritize action on pollution that poses the most risk to populations.
The Global Alliance on Health and Pollution
In July 2012, Pure Earth convened a third meeting of world leaders and experts on pollution at the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Center in Italy. The Global Alliance on Health and Pollution (GAPH) was formed that year by Pure Earth, the World Bank, UNEP, UNDP, UNIDO, Asian Development Bank, the European Commission, Ministries of Environment and Health of many low- and middle-income countries to address pollution and health at scale. Blacksmith serves as Secretariat for the GAHP. Blacksmith began coordinating an international effort to create a global alliance in 2008. The effort was formerly called the Health and Pollution Fund.
Journal Of Health and Pollution
Published by Pure Earth, the Journal of Health and Pollution (JH&P) is a quarterly on-line journal of peer-reviewed research and news. JH&P is grant funded by the World Bank and the European Union. There are no charges to readers or authors. JH&P aims to facilitate discussion of toxic pollution, impacts to human health and strategies for site remediation. The journal focuses on work by researchers from or about under-represented low- and middle-income countries.
Key projects
- Mexico: Barro Aprobado - Research shows nearly half the children in Mexico are impacted by lead poisoning from traditional pottery glazed with lead that is used in many homes and restaurants in Mexico. The Barro Aprobado project is raising public awareness about the dangers of leaded pottery, and promoting the use and production of lead-free pottery.
- Azerbaijan: Cleanup of infamous pesticide site in Salyan.
- Zambia: Lead remediation in Kabwe, sometimes called the world's most toxic town.
- Mongolia: Training artisanal miners to go mercury free. Over 1000 miners have been trained to date.
- Ukraine: Cleanup of former Soviet arms site, filled with highly toxin chemicals and explosives, as chronicled in Bloomberg Businessweek.
- Nigeria: In 2011, Pure Earth received a Green Star Award for emergency work during the Nigeria lead poisoning crisis in Zamfara.
- Armenia: Cleanup of 10th century historical site.
Other highlights
In 2021, Pure Earth launched a project to analyze the lead (Pb) content in thousands of products and food samples in markets across 25 low- and middle-income countries. The Rapid Market Screening (RMS) project is the first analysis of its kind that we are aware of. The RMS project follows the 2020 publication of The Toxic Truth report by Pure Earth and UNICEF, which revealed for the first time that an estimated 800 million children, or 1 in 3, have blood lead levels indicative of lead poisoning (>5 μg/dl).
In October 2022, Pure Earth's Founder and President Richard Fuller was included in the #FuturePerfect50 list from Vox, recognizing “The scientists, thinkers, scholars, writers, and activists building a more perfect future.”
In 2010, Pure Earth's impact was charted in a profile of its founder Richard Fuller in Time's "Power of One" column.
2015 saw the release of the book The Brown Agenda.
In 2019, Pure Earth released the report Pollution Knows No Borders: How the Pollution Crisis in Low- and Middle-Income Countries Affects Everyone’s Health, and What We Can Do to Address It.
Name change
Pure Earth was founded as the Blacksmith Institute in 1999.
In 2014, Blacksmith launched a new initiative – Blacksmith Institute for a Pure Earth – with English actor Dev Patel as celebrity ambassador. Patel worked closely with Blacksmith to suggest the new name, and will help support efforts to raise awareness about toxic pollution, an issue he says he first grew aware of after filming in India. Blacksmith will slowly transition to a new name – Pure Earth – with the aim of broadening awareness of global toxic pollution issues to the general public.
World's Worst Polluted Places reports
For over a decade, Pure Earth's World's Worst Pollution Problems reports identified and drew attention to the worst, and most dangerously polluted places on the planet, while documenting and quantifying the startling health and environmental impacts of this neglected problem. The series of reports succeeded in raising global awareness about the extent and impacts of toxic pollution in low- and middle-income countries. For example, the 2015 highlights its "top six toxic threats": Lead, Radionuclides, Mercury, Chromium, Pesticides and Cadmium. The reports were archived on the website worstpolluted.org.
References
- "Inside the Movement to Clean Up the World's Most Toxic Sites". Reasons to be Cheerful. 2021-05-14. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
- ^ "Lancet Commission on Pollution & Health". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- ^ "The Lancet Commission on pollution and health". The Lancet. October 20, 2017.
- Sampathkumar, Mythili (April 8, 2015). "MEET A 2015-ER: RICHARD FULLER". Un Dispatch.
- "The Toxic Truth Report - Pure Earth and UNICEF". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Charity Navigator - Rating for Pure Earth".
- "Blacksmith Institute Announces Name Change". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "A Open Letter: It Is Time To Put Pollution On The Map" (PDF). Pure Earth. 2017.
- "What in the World: A deadly pollution problem". CNN.
- "Toxic Site Identification Program (TSIP)". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Incubating Ideas for Change at the Bellagio Center". Pollution Blog. Blacksmith Institute. 18 April 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- "Health and Pollution Fund". Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- "Global Alliance on Health and Pollution". Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- Dolan, David (5 May 2009). "Toxic hotspots affect 600 million in developing world". Reuters. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- "Journal of Health and Pollution Home". Journal of Health and Pollution. 2025-01-10. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Mexico: Barro Aprobado/Lead-Glazed Pottery". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Azerbaijan: Persistent Obsolete Pesticide Removal in Salyan". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- Carrington, Damian (2017-05-28). "The world's most toxic town: the terrible legacy of Zambia's lead mines". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
- "Mongolia: Training Artisanal Gold Miners To Go Mercury Free". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "The Chemical Weapons Ukrainian Separatists Didn't Get". Bloomberg.com. 15 September 2014. Archived from the original on September 15, 2014.
- "Six UN-backed green awards handed out for work in disasters". UN News Centre. 18 May 2011. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- Earth, Pure (2018-12-17). "Toxic Legacy At 10th Century Armenian Historic Site Comes To An End With Pure Earth Cleanup". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Rapid Market Screening Program". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Pure Earth President is Named to "Future Perfect 50" List of People Building a Better Future". 20 October 2022.
- Walsh, Bryan (18 October 2010). "Power of One". TIME Magazine. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
- "The Brown Agenda: My Mission to Clean Up the World's Most Life-Threatening Pollution". The Brown Agenda. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Pollution Knows No Borders". Pure Earth. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Dev Patel Launches 'Pure Earth' Nontoxic Campaign". Archived from the original on 2016-08-20. Retrieved 2014-09-23.
- "Q&A with "Slumdog Millionaire": Dev Patel on his Belated Birthday Present - A Pure Earth". 28 April 2014.
- "2015 - Press Release". www.worstpolluted.org. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- "Home". worstpolluted.org. Retrieved 2025-01-15.