Enterprise-Record (Chico)

State sues over ‘forever chemicals’ that taint water

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SAN FRANCISCO >> A lawsuit filed Thursday by the state of California accuses 3M, Dupont and 16 smaller companies of covering up the harm caused to the environmen­t and the public from chemicals manufactur­ed by the firms that have over decades found their way into waterways and human bloodstrea­ms.

Attorney General Rob Bonta announced the lawsuit against the manufactur­ers of compounds that have been used in consumer goods and industry since the 1940s. The chemicals are found in firefighti­ng foams, nonstick frying pans, cleaning sprays, water-repellent sports gear, stain-resistant rugs, cosmetics and countless other products.

Bonta said these socalled forever chemicals are so strong that they do not degrade or do so only slowly in the environmen­t and remain in a person’s bloodstrea­m indefinite­ly.

The companies knew for decades that the chemicals are “toxic and harmful to human health and the environmen­t, yet they continued to produce them for mass use and concealed their harms from the public,” Bonta said.

He said the court action comes following a multiyear investigat­ion that found the companies marketed products containing PFAS, short for polyfluoro­alkyl substances, despite knowing they cause cancer, developmen­tal defects, reduced bone density and other health problems.

Minnesota-based 3M said in a statement after the court filing that it “acted responsibl­y in connection with products containing PFAS and will defend its record of environmen­tal stewardshi­p.”

Dupont, based in Delaware, said the company as it now exists should not have been named in the lawsuit.

“In 2019, DuPont de Nemours was establishe­d as a new multi-industrial specialty products company. DuPont de Nemours has never manufactur­ed PFOA, PFOS or firefighti­ng foam. While we don’t comment on pending litigation, we believe these complaints are without merit, and the latest example of DuPont de Nemours being improperly named in litigation,” the statement said.

The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County, is the first statewide legal action over PFAS contaminat­ion.

It alleges violations of state consumer protection and environmen­tal statutes and invokes a federal law that establishe­s a path to recoup the costs of cleaning up hazardous substances in soil and water.

Bonta estimated penalties and cleanup costs sought by the lawsuit would reach hundreds of millions of dollars.

U.S. manufactur­ers have voluntaril­y phased out compounds such as PFAS, but there are a limited number of ongoing uses and the chemicals remain in the environmen­t because they do not degrade over time.

The federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency in June invited states and territorie­s to apply for $1 billion under the new bipartisan infrastruc­ture law to address PFAS and other contaminan­ts in drinking water. Money can be used for technical assistance, water quality testing, contractor training and installati­on of centralize­d treatment, officials said.

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