prova prova
Real cost of the Indian Coal
A miner bathing in the river Jharkhand: a mining state of Eastern India – it is the mined coal from here that has made this Indian state world-known for being the second largest coal producer. Second only to China, India extracts from it’s soil a quantity of coal overly sufficient for its energy and transport needs; the remainder is exported worldwide. 90% of the mines, which work continuously, are open-air and most of these work upon auto-combustion which releases an incalculable amount of carbon monoxide – the cause of global warming. Whole forests have been destroyed to make way for this brutal extraction and to satisfy the country’s ever-growing development. The concessions for coal mining are granted by the central government and managed by both state and private owned enterprises, thus creating a social and economic imbalance in the area. Everything rotates around the mining industry which was once an agricultural area and is now fully converted to coal mining. Many people are jobless and can not cultivate their fields because groundwater aquifers are polluted by agents deriving from coal combustion. These thousands of people, without economic opportunities, are forced to work illegally, in nonexistent safety conditions and with state police always on their backs. The dramatic increase of pollution due to this brutal coal extraction is causing the population to suffer from the most serious respiratory diseases, from lung cancer to silicosis, from many typologies of tuberculosis to obstruction of the respiratory system. Related, as well, are severe blood diseases caused by carbon monoxide inhalation, cardiac disfunction and a short-life expectancy (which does not exceed the 50 year mark). These diseases are destroying the future of this Indian state in the name of progress. Throughout the area, new villages are up-starting close to the open-air coal mines, with devastating consequences for the population, who live without the most basic hygiene infrastru
Numerose esperienze espositive nazionali ed internazionali con mostre personali e collettive.
Libro INDEPENCENCE ON MY SKIN edito da Corsiero Editore 2023
Una parte del progetto Indian Coal è stato pubblicato sul volume BONDED LABOR (Columbia University NYC 2012).
Una parte del progetto Chernobyl è stato pubblicato sul volume CONNECTIONS ACROSS A HUMAN PLANET (Photojournale 2009).
Esperienze nell’insegnamento con diversi workshop sulla fotografia e sul fotogiornalismo in diverse sedi di prestigio, tra cui FONDAZIONE FOTOGRAFIA di MODENA, ISO-LAB di VENEZIALetture Portfolio, tra cui nell’ambito di Fotografia Europea edizione 2015, Letture Portfolio one to oneonline e diverse consulenze nell’ ambiente fotografico.
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