Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Funeral-Ceremony-in-China-27MZIFI55MM4.htmlConceptually similarWedding Celebration in ChinaGP026JSCompleted★★★★Children in a Village in ChinaGP026JPCompleted★★★★Graves Covered by Coal Ash in ChinaGP026I8Completed★★★★Coal Ash Polluted Soil in ChinaGP026ICCompleted★★★★Coal Ash Polluted Soil in ChinaGP026IDCompleted★★★★Shuimotou Village in ChinaGP026JOCompleted★★★★Coal Ash Pollution in ChinaGP026IMCompleted★★★★Coal Ash in Damaged House in ChinaGP026IPCompleted★★★★Coal Ash Disposal Site n ChinaGP026JDCompleted★★★★View AllGP026JQFuneral Ceremony in ChinaA funeral for a village woman nicknamed Chen in Mayi village, near Shentou Number 2 Power Plant in Shanxi province. Chen, who married into the Jia family, died peacefully on the 27th day of the 6th month of the lunar calendar. She was 92 years old. The future of her descendants in the village may be less certain, as land, air and water pollution from the ever-expanding coal ash disposal site only worsens.Locations:Asia-China-ShanxiDate:11 Aug, 2010Credit:© Zhao Gang / GreenpeaceMaximum size:2800px X 1867pxKeywords:Climate (campaign title)-Coal-Funerals-Indoors-KWCI (GPI)-Land pollution-Outdoors-Toxics (campaign title)-Traditional clothing-Two people-Water pollutionShoot:Coal Ash Disposal Documentation in ChinaThe threats of coal combustion waste have been vastly underestimated in China due to regulatory loopholes that allow power companies to freely dump toxic coal ash in the environment, according to Greenpeace’s latest report, the True Cost of Coal – An Investigation into Coal Ash in China. Related Collections:Report 'True Cost of Coal: China Coal Ash'Coal Ash Disposal Documentation in China (Photo & Video)