Radesca S.A. Explained
Radesca S.A. (also known as JUAN J. RADESCA S.A.[1]) is an electronics manufacturing company in Uruguay, in the neighborhood of Peñarol in Montevideo. The company is the only producer of lead-acid batteries in the country.[2] The factory was founded in 1935 and has been operated as a family business since.[3] As of 2013, they employed 43 people and were protected by the national government as part of maintenance of national industries, especially for national automotive parts.[4] [5] [6] They gained significant prominence during the Import substitution industrialization policy period during the 1960s.[7]
Their main manufacturing and smelting plant for lead in Montevideo is one of the main sources of lead contamination in the country. During the 1960s, the plant employed a number of processes for lead-acid battery recycling that exposed both employees and the local communities to large levels of industrial contamination.[7] Workers would later describe active collusion between doctors, state agencies and the managers to hide the impact of lead on worker health.
Notes and References
- Web site: Resolución N° 809/990. 2022-01-27. www.impo.com.uy.
- Book: Renfrew, Daniel. Life without lead : contamination, crisis, and hope in Uruguay. 2019. 978-0-520-96824-0. Oakland, California. 24–50. English. Chapter One: To Live, Not Only Survive. 1102765674.
- Web site: Baterías Radesca Historia - Uruguay radesca.com. 2022-01-27. es.
- Web site: Nueve autopartistas nacionales participarán de un proyecto de integración productiva. 2022-01-27. Uruguay Presidencia. es.
- Garmendia Ronco. Cecilia Inés. Hernández Llanos. María Paula. 2012. La incidencia del Mercosur sobre competitividad en la producción de autopartes en el Uruguay. es.
- Laurenzo. Martín. Cardozo. Nicolás. Fletcher. Federico. 2009. Estrategias competitivas en los mercados de Argentina, Chile y Uruguay, desde la perspectiva de una empreesa uruguaya productora y exportadora de baterías industriales. es.
- Book: Sellers. Christopher. Dangerous Trade: Histories of Industrial Hazard across a Globalizing World. Melling. Joseph. 2011-12-22. Temple University Press. 978-1-4399-0470-1. 101. en.