El Dorado News-Times

Biden administra­tion sets first-ever limits on ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water

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The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday finalized strict limits on certain so-called “forever chemicals” in drinking water that will require utilities to reduce them to the lowest level they can be reliably measured. Officials say this will reduce exposure for 100 million people and help prevent thousands of illnesses, including cancers.

The rule is the first national drinking water limit on toxic PFAS, or perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, which are widespread and long lasting in the environmen­t.

Health advocates praised the Environmen­tal Protection Agency for not backing away from tough limits the agency proposed last year. But water utilities took issue with the rule, saying treatment systems are expensive to install and that customers will end up paying more for water.

Water providers are entering a new era with significan­t additional health standards that the EPA says will make tap water safer for millions of consumers — a Biden administra­tion priority. The agency has also proposed forcing utilities to remove dangerous lead pipes.

Utility groups warn the rules will cost tens of billions of dollars each and fall hardest on small communitie­s with fewer resources. Legal challenges are sure to follow.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan says the rule is the most important action the EPA has ever taken on PFAS.

“The result is a comprehens­ive and life-changing rule, one that will improve the health and vitality of so many communitie­s across our country,” said Regan.

PFAS chemicals are hazardous because they don’t degrade in the environmen­t and are linked to health issues such as low birth weight and liver disease, along with certain cancers. The EPA estimates the rule will cost about $1.5 billion to implement each year, but doing so will prevent nearly 10,000 deaths over decades and significan­tly reduce serious illnesses.

They’ve been used in everyday products including nonstick pans, firefighti­ng foam and waterproof clothing. Although some of the most common types are phased out in the U.S., others remain. Water providers will now be forced to remove contaminat­ion put in the environmen­t by other industries.

“It’s that accumulati­on that’s the problem,” said Scott Belcher, a North Carolina State University professor who researches PFAS toxicity. “Even tiny, tiny, tiny amounts each time you take a drink of water over your lifetime is going to keep adding up, leading to the health effects.”

PFAS is a broad family of chemical substances, and the new rule sets strict limits on two common types — called PFOA and PFOS — at 4 parts per trillion. Three other types that include GenEx Chemicals that are a major problem in North Carolina are limited to 10 parts per trillion. Water providers will have to test for these PFAS chemicals and tell the public when levels are too high. Combinatio­ns of some PFAS types will be limited, too.

Regan will announce the rule in Fayettevil­le, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

Environmen­tal and health advocates praised the rule, but said PFAS manufactur­ers knew decades ago the substances were dangerous yet hid or downplayed the evidence. Limits should have come sooner, they argue.

“Reducing PFAS in our drinking water is the most cost effective way to reduce our exposure,” said Scott Faber, a food and water expert at Environmen­tal Working Group. “It’s much more challengin­g to reduce other exposures such as PFAS in food or clothing or carpets.”

Over the last year, EPA has periodical­ly released batches of utility test results for PFAS in drinking water. Roughly 16% of utilities found at least one of the two strictly limited PFAS chemicals at or above the new limits. These utilities serve tens of millions of people. The Biden administra­tion, however, expects about 6-10% of water systems to exceed the new limits.

Water providers will generally have three years to do testing. If those test exceed the limits, they’ll have two more years to install treatment systems, according to EPA officials.

Some funds are available to help utilities. Manufactur­er 3M recently agreed to pay more than $10 billion to drinking water providers to settle PFAS litigation. And the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law includes billions to combat the substance. But utilities say more will be needed.

For some communitie­s, tests results were a surprise. Last June, a utility outside Philadelph­ia that serves nearly 9,000 people learned that one of its wells had a PFOA level of 235 parts per trillion, among the highest results in the country at the time.

“I mean, obviously, it was a shock,” said Joseph Hastings, director of the joint public works department for the Collegevil­le and Trappe boroughs, whose job includes solving problems presented by new regulation­s.

The well was quickly yanked offline, but Hastings still doesn’t know the contaminat­ion source. Several other wells were above the EPA’s new limits, but lower than those the state of Pennsylvan­ia set earlier. Now, Hastings says installing treatment systems could be a multi-million dollar endeavor, a major expense for a small customer base.

The new regulation is “going to throw public confidence in drinking water into chaos,” said Mike McGill, president of WaterPIO, a water industry communicat­ions firm.

The American Water Works Associatio­n, an industry group, says it supports the developmen­t of PFAS limits in drinking water, but argues the EPA’s rule has big problems.

The agency underestim­ated its high cost, which can’t be justified for communitie­s with low levels of PFAS, and it’ll raise customer water bills, the associatio­n said. Plus, there aren’t enough experts and workers — and supplies of filtration material are limited.

Work in some places has started. The company Veolia operates utilities serving about 2.3 million people across six eastern states and manages water systems for millions more. Veolia built PFAS treatment for small water systems that serve about 150,000 people. The company expects, however, that roughly 50 more sites will need treatment — and it’s working to scale up efforts to reduce PFAS in larger communitie­s it serves.

Such efforts followed dramatic shifts in EPA’s health guidance for PFAS in recent years as more research into its health harms emerged. Less than a decade ago, EPA issued a health advisory that PFOA and PFOS levels combined shouldn’t exceed 70 parts per trillion. Now, the agency says no amount is safe.

Public alarm has increased, too. In Minnesota, for example, Amara’s Law aims to stop avoidable PFAS use. It’s been nearly a year since the law’s namesake, Amara Strande, died from a rare cancer her family blames on PFAS contaminat­ion by 3M near her high school in Oakdale, although a connection between PFAS and her cancer can’t be proven. Biden administra­tion officials say communitie­s shouldn’t suffer like Oakdale. 3M says it extends its deepest condolence­s to Amara’s friends and family.

Losing Amara pushed the family towards activism. They’ve testified multiple times in favor of PFAS restrictio­ns.

“Four parts per trillion, we couldn’t ask for a better standard,” Amara’s sister Nora said. “It’s a very ambitious goal, but anything higher than that is endangerin­g lives.”

 ?? (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel) ?? Logan Feeney pours a PFAS water sample into a container for research, Wednesday, April 10, 2024, at a U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency lab in Cincinnati. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Wednesday announced its first-ever limits for several common types of PFAS, the so-called “forever chemicals,” in drinking water.
(AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel) Logan Feeney pours a PFAS water sample into a container for research, Wednesday, April 10, 2024, at a U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency lab in Cincinnati. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Wednesday announced its first-ever limits for several common types of PFAS, the so-called “forever chemicals,” in drinking water.

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