The Evening Leader

DuPont, Chemours reach agreement over ‘forever chemicals’

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DOVER, Del. (AP) — The Dupont Co. and its spinoff business Chemours have agreed to resolve legal disputes over environmen­tal liabilitie­s for pollution related to man-made chemicals associated with an increased risk of cancer and other health problems.

The binding memorandum of understand­ing announced Friday comes just over a month after Delaware’s Supreme Court upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit alleging that DuPont massively downplayed the cost of environmen­tal liabilitie­s imposed on Chemours when DuPont spun off its former performanc­e chemicals unit in 2015.

The chemicals at issue are known as perand polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS. They include perfluoroo­ctanoic acid, or PFOA, which was used in the production of Teflon, and have also been used in firefighti­ng foam, water-repellent clothing and many other household and personal items. They sometimes are referred to as “forever chemicals” because of their longevity in the environmen­t.

The memorandum resolves legal disputes originatin­g from the spinoff and establishe­s a cost-sharing arrangemen­t and escrow account for potential future legacy PFAS liabilitie­s arising out of pre-July 1, 2015 conduct.

DuPont, Chemours and Corteva, an independen­t public company that was previously the agricultur­e division of DowDuPont, also have agreed to resolve about 95 pending cases, as well as other unfiled matters, in multidistr­ict PFOA litigation in Ohio. The $83 million settlement will be split roughly equally among the three companies. It does not include a case that resulted in a $50 million jury verdict in March that DuPont is appealing.

The Ohio verdict stemmed from a class action lawsuit involving about 80,000 residents of Ohio and West Virginia who drank water that was contaminat­ed by chemical releases from DuPont’s Washington Works facility near Parkersbur­g, West Virginia.

More than 3,500 individual class members who suffered from any of six diseases linked to PFOA filed individual personal injury cases against DuPont. Those cases have been centralize­d in Ohio federal court.

After three trials in which juries returned verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs, DuPont agreed in 2017 to settle the remaining 3,500plus cases.

Since that time, more than 100 post-settlement cases have been filed. The first trial in those cases resulted in a $50 million verdict for a man who developed testicular cancer, and a mistrial in a consolidat­ed case involving a woman with kidney cancer.

“The agreement will provide a measure of security and certainty for each company and our respective shareholde­rs using a transparen­t process to address and resolve any potential future legacy PFAS matters,” the CEOs of the three companies said in a joint statement.

Under the costsharin­g arrangemen­t, DuPont and Corteva, on one hand, and Chemours, on the other, agree to a 50-50 split of certain expenses incurred over a term not to exceed 20 years, or an aggregate $4 billion of qualified expense and escrow contributi­ons.

Under an existing agreement from 2019, DuPont and Corteva will each bear 50% of the first $300 million. After that, DuPont would be responsibl­e for 71% and Corteva for the remaining 29%. That would bring DuPont’s share of the potential $2 billion contributi­on from DuPont and Corteva to about $1.36 billion. Corteva’s share would be about $640 million.

The companies also agreed to establish a $1 billion maximum escrow account to address potential future PFAS liabilitie­s, with annual contributi­ons over eight years.

After the expiration of the arrangemen­t, Chemours’ indemnific­ation obligation­s under the separation agreement would continue unchanged, subject to certain exceptions. Chemours will waive legal claims regarding the 2015 spinoff, and pending arbitratio­n regarding those claims will be dismissed.

Chemours sued DuPont in 2019, alleging that DuPont deliberate­ly lowballed the cost of environmen­tal liabilitie­s Chemours would face in reimbursin­g DuPont for pollution related to PFAS.

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