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Toxic Shell

Screen Shot 2014-12-08 at 22.24.14By a Former Shell Employee

We have already discussed failed Shell Gasoline brands Formula Shell and Shell SU 2000.

Do you recall ‘Shell Pest Strips’? These were insecticide laced things you hung in your house, kitchen, etc., and they were very popular in the 1960’s and 1970’s. The FDA forced the recall of those things. It turns out the stuff they were putting in those things could be about as harmful to humans as they were to the bugs.

Extracts from a related article published in 1993:

Shell Chemical had to take its “No-Pest-Strip” off the market back in ’79 because . . . well, there was that unfortunate incident of the young man dying. Shell settled out-of-court with that family, but the Environmental Protection Agency was finding hundreds of other cases of poisoning by DDVP–the cancer-causing stuff in Shell’s strip that kills pests . . . and some people. So Shell withdrew the product. But they didn’t withdraw it far . . . Just across the Mexican border.

When a Shell representative was asked if he felt guilty about endangering Mexicans, including children, he said: “Speaking as a human being, sure you feel bad. But I’m not being paid to be a human being.”

And extracts from another article:

Soon the spring-summer mass advertising campaign for the Shell no-pest strip will be urging consum­ers to hang these silent insect hunt­ers in their homes.

Don’t buy — unless, that is, you be­lieve a product which vaporizes a nerve poison 24 hours a day in your bedroom, living room or family room is a necessary ingredient of modern living.

Just a few weeks ago, Dr. Law­rence R. Valcovic of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, told the EPA:

“There is sufficient evidence from non-mammalian systems to indicate that DDVP has the intrinsic potential for inducing genetic alteration . . . I would recommend that human exposure be avoided if possible.”

Shell, on the other hand, does not seem to be as concerned. It pays its laboratory testers and gets its com­forting interpretations while the cash registers merrily ring up millions in annual sales.

And then there was the flexible polypropylene piping scandal of the 1980’s. It was supposed to revolutionize the household plumbing business. But there was a ‘problem’. Unlike conventional PVC piping the stuff was mechanically unstable and quickly developed leaks. The class action lawsuit over that cost Shell (and du Pont) several hundred million dollars. The damage the stuff caused to homes when water piping failed was in the billions.

Canadian $50 million settlement

In the US, the Polybutylene Pipe Settlement Fund has spent more than $976 million to provide relief to homeowners. Shell has also settled several major lawsuits.

I find it interesting that Shell’s actions could have affected the health of virtually every American.

Shell should stay out of the consumer products business. They don’t really know how to get it right.

Anything for a buck.

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, and shellnews.net, are owned by John Donovan. There is also a Wikipedia segment.

3 Comments

  1. Jay Brick says:

    I remember seeing those in my uncles meat shop. He lived to be 94. My aunt 97. The toxins oozing out of them where ever they went.

  2. Mike Holland says:

    I remember those pest strips hanging all over atHiwan country club pool when they were cooking hamburgers and marking food.it has not killed me yet.It was in the 60 ‘s

  3. jon alpert says:

    One summer, I worked for Shell Chemicals – making No Pest Strips and Flea Collars. Management said the ingredients were harmless. But once a week – all the employees would line up for blood tests – and one or two would be told to stay home for a week.

    Even 40 years later – I’m super sensitive to insecticides. My body swells up if i’m near fly spray.

    You can’t imagine the toxic clouds that emerged from the machines when they broke down on a hot summer day.

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