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DRC: Child labourers must not pay the price for UK’s shift to electric vehicles

 
Responding to the UK government’s commitment to ban all new petrol and diesel cars and vans from 2040, Mark Dummett, Business and Human Rights Researcher at Amnesty International, said:
 
“This is good news for the environment and for air quality, but drivers should be aware that while electric cars may be green, they’re not always clean.
 
“Our research shows that there is a significant risk of cobalt mined by children and adults in appalling conditions in the Democratic Republic of Congo ending up in the batteries of electric cars. Workers in the DRC, earning as little as one dollar a day and at risk of fatal accidents and illness, must not pay the price for the UK’s shift to electric cars.
 
“Drivers will want to know that their new cars are not linked to the suffering of child labourers in the DRC, but there is a worrying lack of transparency across the car manufacturing industry, with many leading names failing to disclose information about their cobalt supply chains.
 
“With car makers in the spotlight today, we are calling on them to make public the steps they are taking to ensure that their supply chains are not tainted by human rights abuses, so that consumers’ minds can be put at rest.”
 
More information on the link between child labour and the electric car industry can be found here: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2016/09/electric-cars-running-on-child-labour/
 
For more information, please contact Sue Montgomery, media relations for Amnesty International Canada at 613-744-7667 ext 236 or smontgomery@amnsty.ca

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