Dayton Daily News

Cities will need tech, investment to get PFAS out of water

- By Joe Charbonnet

Harmful chemicals known as PFAS can be found in everything from children’s clothes to soil to drinking water, and regulating these chemicals has been a goal of public and environmen­tal health researcher­s for years. On March 14, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency proposed what would be the first set of federal guidelines regulating levels of PFAS in drinking water. The guidelines will be open to public comment for 60 days before being finalized.

Joe Charbonnet is an environmen­tal engineer at Iowa State University who develops techniques to remove contaminan­ts like PFAS from water. He explains what the proposed guidelines would require, how water utilities could meet these requiremen­ts and how much it might cost to get these so-called forever chemicals out of U.S. drinking water.

1. What do the new guidelines say?

PFAS are associated with a variety of health issues and have been a focus of environmen­tal and public health researcher­s. There are thousands of members of this class of chemicals, and this proposed regulation would set the allowable limits in drinking water for six of them.

Two of the six chemicals — PFOA and PFOS — are no longer produced in large quantities, but they remain common in the environmen­t because they were so widely used and break down extremely slowly. The new guidelines would allow for no more than four parts per trillion of PFOA or PFOS in drinking water.

Four other PFAS — GenX, PFBS, PFNA and PFHxS — would be regulated as well, although with higher limits. These chemicals are common replacemen­ts for PFOA and PFOS and are their close chemical cousins. Because of their similarity, they cause harm to human and environmen­tal health in much the same way as legacy PFAS.

A few states have already establishe­d their own limits on levels of PFAS in drinking water, but these new guidelines, if enacted, would be the first legally enforceabl­e federal limits and would affect the entire U.S.

2. How many utilities will need to make changes?

PFAS are harmful even at extremely low levels, and the proposed limits reflect that fact. The allowable concentrat­ions would be comparable to a few grains of salt in an Olympic-size swimming pool. Hundreds of utilities all across the U.S. have levels of PFAS above the proposed limits in their water supplies and would need to make changes to meet these standards.

While many areas have been tested for PFAS in the past, many systems have not, so health officials don’t know precisely how many water systems would be affected. A recent study used existing data to estimate that about 40% of municipal drinking water supplies may exceed the proposed concentrat­ion limits.

3. What can utilities do to meet the guidelines?

There are two major technologi­es that most utilities consider for removing PFAS from drinking water: activated carbon or ion exchange systems.

Activated carbon is a charcoal-like substance that PFAS stick to quite well and can be used to remove PFAS from water. In 2006, the town of Oakdale, Minnesota, added an activated carbon treatment step to its water system. Not only did this additional water treatment bring PFAS levels down substantia­lly, there were significan­t improvemen­ts in birth weight and the number of full-term pregnancie­s in that community after the change.

Ion exchange systems work by flowing water over charged particles that can remove PFAS. Ion exchange systems are typically even better at lowering PFAS concentrat­ions than activated carbon systems, but they are also more expensive.

Another option available to some cities is simply finding alternativ­e water sources that are less contaminat­ed. While this is a wonderful, low-cost means of lowering contaminat­ion, it points to a major disparity in environmen­tal justice; more rural and less well-resourced utilities are unlikely to have this option.

4. Is such a major transition feasible?

By law, the EPA must consider not just human health but also the feasibilit­y of treatment and the potential financial cost when setting maximum contaminan­t levels in drinking water. While the proposed limits are certainly attainable for many water utilities, the costs will be high.

The federal government has made available billions of dollars in funding for treating water. But some estimates put the total cost of meeting the proposed regulation­s for the entire country at around $400 billion — much more than the available funding. Some municipali­ties may seek financial help for treatment from nearby polluters, while others may raise water rates.

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