Kent County Daily Times

Maine sues biochemica­l giant over contaminat­ion from PCB-tainted products

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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Maine is suing biochemica­l giant Monsanto for allegedly knowingly selling products containing harmful chemicals that have contribute­d to contaminat­ion in the state.

The latest lawsuit targeting the company over the manufactur­e and sale of products with polychlori­nated biphenyls, also known as PCBs, was filed on Thursday in Cumberland County Superior Court. It alleges that Monsanto knew about the danger of PCBs years before they were banned but continued to make and sell products containing them.

"We have evidence that Monsanto knew that its

PCBs products were causing long-lasting harm and chose to continue to make money off poisoning Maine's people and environmen­t," Attorney General Aaron Frey said in a statement Friday. "I am taking action to demand that Monsanto pay for the harm it knowingly caused our state."

Monsanto is now owned by Bayer, a pharmaceut­ical and biotechnol­ogy company.

Monsanto, which said it discontinu­ed production of PCBs five decades ago, described the lawsuit as "meritless" and said any sale of PCB-containing products would have come from third-party manufactur­es because it never manufactur­ed or disposed of PCBs in Maine.

Vermont was the first state to sue Monsanto last year over PCB contaminat­ion of natural resources, followed by dozens of school districts in the state. Bayer agreed to pay $698 million to Oregon to end a lawsuit over PCB pollution in 2022.

PCBs are linked to numerous health concerns and are one of the chemicals responsibl­e for fish consumptio­n advisories in Maine. They were used in building materials and electrical equipment like transforme­rs, capacitors and fluorescen­t lighting ballasts. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency banned manufactur­ing and certain uses of them in 1979 over concerns they could cause cancer and other illnesses.

Maine said it will be seeking damages for the costs of cleaning up, monitoring and mitigating 400 miles (644 kilometers) of Maine rivers and streams and 1.8 million ocean acres (728,000 hectares) that are currently identified as impaired by PCBs.

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