Witnessing a Masterbatch Factory Powder Leakage: This "Darkness" Isn't Exaggerated

2025-09-01

Some people often say we deliberately exaggerate the dangers of powder leakage from mixers in masterbatch factories. But if you've actually been on the production line, witnessed it firsthand, and experienced it firsthand, you wouldn't have such doubts.

 

Witnessing a Masterbatch Factory Powder Leakage: This "Darkness" Isn't Exaggerated

 

During my visit to the masterbatch factory to film the powder leakage, I didn't touch any of the mixers—I simply walked around the workshop, documenting the situation as normal. But when I finished, I looked down and saw I was completely transformed: my shoes were covered in a thick layer of black dust that fluttered off with a tap. The hems and cuffs of my work clothes were stained black, and even the socks hidden in my shoes had been stained dark gray by the seepage.

 

Witnessing a Masterbatch Factory Powder Leakage: This "Darkness" Isn't Exaggerated

 

When I took off my shoes at home that night to relieve the strain, I discovered an even more heartbreaking detail: the insides of my socks were stained with fine black powder, and even the tops of my feet had been rubbed with a faint black mark. I was only there briefly, never near the equipment, and yet this happened to me. How much dust and black powder do the workers who work in the workshop year-round breathe in, day after day?

 

Is this "black" an exaggeration? It's clear evidence of the dangers of powder leakage. And this is precisely the reason we insist on conducting on-site renovations—not to attract attention, but to help workers breathe less dust and be less exposed to pollution, so they can work in a cleaner and safer environment. Isn't it worth it?

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