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A 2.5-centimeter specimen of banded agate.


Polishing agate in a makeshift lapidary in India. Photo by Sanjiv Pandita, courtesy of Asia Monitor Resource Center.

  Agate cutting is rated as one of the world's most dangerous jobs


April 14, 2013


Silicosis is lung disease caused by inhaling, over an extended period of time, crystalline silica dust. It is typified by inflammation and scarring in the form of nodular lesions in the upper lobes of the lungs. Considered incurable, in its severest form it leads to a disabling shortness of breath, coughing, weakness, weight loss, and, not infrequently, death.

Agate is a form of quartz, which is a microcrystalline variety of silica. With a waxy luster, it comes in white and greys, light blue, oranges, reds and black, and often is banded. It is most typically used in jewelry, but also in a variety of other ornamental displays.

Khambhat, which formerly was known as Cambay, is a city in the Indian state of Gujarat, about 500 kilometers north of Mumbai. It is most probably the world's largest agate cutting center, and possibly home to the greatest concentration of people suffering from silicosis.

According to the People's Training and Research Center and India's National Institute of Occupational Health, agate grinding and polishing ranks among the world's most dangerous work. As many as a third of agate workers in Khambhat will develop the disease.

The disease is preventable through proper factory conditions, which include the consistent watering down of the gems being processed and adequate ventilation. But in Khambhat, most of the work takes place in sheds and empty lots in residential areas, and most of the workers are artisans hired without contracts by manufacturers, who are exempt from ensuring proper safety standards because they do not locate their equipment under one roof.

In 2010, India's Gem and Jewelry Export Promotion Council announced a plan to build in Khambhat a safe, common facility for workers, funded by agate traders. But it still has not been implemented.

In the meantime, the disease is claiming lives. Since PTRC began screening agate workers for silicosis in 2007 in conjunction with doctors at Karamsad Medical College, more than 200 cases of silicosis was reported among about 700 workers who submitted themselves for testing. About 70 of those 200 have already died of the disease.

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