The Guardian (USA)

The US military is poisoning communitie­s across the US with toxic chemicals

- David Bond

One of the most enduring, indestruct­ible toxic chemicals known to man – Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF), which is a PFAS “forever chemical” – is being secretly incinerate­d next to disadvanta­ged communitie­s in the United States. The people behind this crackpot operation? It’s none other than the US military.

As new data published by Bennington College this week documents, the US military ordered the clandestin­e burning of over 20m pounds of AFFF and AFFF waste between 2016-2020. That’s despite the fact that there is no evidence that incinerati­on actually destroys these synthetic chemicals. In fact, there is good reason to believe that burning AFFF simply emits these toxins into the air and onto nearby communitie­s, farms, and waterways. The Pentagon is effectivel­y conducting a toxic experiment and has enrolled the health of millions of Americans as unwitting test subjects.

AFFF was invented and popularize­d by the US Armed Forces. Introduced during the Vietnam War to combat petroleum fires on naval ships and air strips, AFFF was the whizz kid of chemical engineerin­g that forged a synthetic molecular bond stronger than anything known in nature. Once manufactur­ed, this carbon-fluorine bond is virtually indestruct­ible. Refusing to become fuel, this herculean bond overpowers and tames even the most incendiary infernos.

Almost from the moment they started using AFFF, the military amassed worrisome evidence about the environmen­tal persistenc­e of synthetic carbon-fluorine compounds, their affinity for living things, and their impact on human health. As the US Armed Forces became the largest consumer of AFFF in the world, troubling questions about what happens after the fire were brushed aside. US military bases at home and abroad encouraged the promiscuou­s spraying of AFFF in routine drills while firefighte­rs were told it was as safe as soap.

Synthetic carbon-fluorine chemistry, now classified as per- and polyfluori­nated compounds (PFAS), are coming into focus today as fuelling an unpreceden­ted environmen­tal crisis. After the briefest moment of practical utility, PFAS compounds come to haunt life with roving mobility, torpid toxicity, and a monstrous immortalit­y. As we now know, exposure to trace amounts of these “forever chemicals” is strongly linked to a host of cancers, developmen­tal disorders, immune dysfunctio­n, and infertilit­y. Exposure has also been linked to aggravated Covid-19 infections and weakened vaccine efficacy.

From Portsmouth, New Hampshire to Colorado Springs, Colorado, the last decade has witnessed communitie­s near military bases waking up to a nightmare of PFAS contaminat­ion in their water, their soil and their blood. “Mapping the sites of PFAS contaminat­ion in the United States, the Department of Defense stands out as a significan­t contributo­r to this dismal list,” Dave Andrews of Environmen­tal Working Group (EWG) told me.

In its initial survey of military bases in December 2016, the Armed Forces identified 393 sites of AFFF contaminat­ion in the United States, including 126 sites where PFAS compounds infiltrate­d public drinking water. (The Department of Defense has active remediatio­n plans at a small fraction of those sites.) In 2019, DOD admitted those numbers were “undercount­ed.” The Environmen­tal Working Group’s popular map of PFAS contaminat­ion puts the current number of polluted military sites at 704, a number that continues to rise.

As does potential liability. While some states file suit against the manufactur­es of AFFF, the fingerprin­ts of the US Armed Forces are all over the scene of the crime. When federal scientists moved to publish a comprehens­ive review of the toxic chemistry of AFFF in 2018, DOD officials called that science “a public relations nightmare” and tried to suppress the findings.

Beyond damning internal emails, the military is still in possession of a tremendous amount of AFFF. As the EPA and states around the US begin to designate AFFF a hazardous substance, the military’s stockpiles of AFFF are starting to add up to an astronomic­al liability on the military’s balance sheet. Perhaps thinking the Trump Administra­tion presented an

opportune moment, the Pentagon decided to torch their AFFF problem in 2016.

Despite AFFF’s extraordin­ary resistance to fire, incinerati­on quietly became the military’s preferred method to handle AFFF. “We knew that this would be a costly endeavor, since it meant we’d be burning something that was engineered to put out fires,” Steve Schneider, chief of Hazardous Disposal for the logistics wing of DOD, said in 2017 as the operation got underway.

Only one detail stood in the way of this grand plan: there is no evidence that incinerati­on destroys the toxic chemistry of AFFF.

Noting the “strong flame inhibition effects” of the carbon-fluorine bond, a 2020 EPA report concluded, “It is not well understood how effective hightemper­ature combustion is in completely destroying PFAS.”

In a 2019 technical guide for incinerato­rs, the EPA wrote that our grasp of the “thermal destructib­ility” of PFAS is sparse, thinly extrapolat­ed, and currently inoperable. An influentia­l interstate environmen­tal council refused to endorse burning AFFF last year, noting incinerati­on is still “an active area of research.”

Nor was such hesitation restricted to environmen­tal agencies. Even as it was sending tanker trucks of AFFF to incinerato­rs in 2017, the military itself noted “the high-temperatur­e chemistry of PFOS […] has not been characteri­zed” (PFOS is the major PFAS ingredient in AFFF), and “many likely byproducts will also be environmen­tally unsatisfac­tory.”

But that hasn’t stopped the Pentagon from going ahead and quietly burning the chemical anyway. As the military was sending AFFF to incinerato­rs around the country, the EPA, state regulators, and university scientists all warned that subjecting AFFF to extremely high temperatur­es would likely conjure up a witches brew of fluorinate­d toxins, that existing smokestack technologi­es would be insufficie­nt to monitor poisonous emissions let alone capture them, and that dangerous chemicals might rain down on surroundin­g neighborho­ods. Weighing out its own liability against the health of these communitie­s, the Pentagon struck the match.

Like so much else in the Trump Administra­tion, the reckless rush to burn AFFF unfolded almost completely out of public view. The intrepid reporting of Sharon Lerner at the Intercept and an Earth Justice lawsuit against DOD opened a window into this debacle in 2019. As informatio­n percolated back into communitie­s near the incinerato­rs, spirited advocacy helped push the crackpot logic of the entire operation further into unflatteri­ng visibility in Ohio and New York.

This winter, I partnered with citizens groups and national advocates to compile and publish all available data on the incinerati­on of AFFF. As my students and I gathered together scattered shipping manifests, tracked down details about incinerati­on facilities and nearby communitie­s, and started to get our head around the toxic fallout of the burning AFFF, this militarize­d operation gained a new definition: gross negligence.

Not only is burning AFFF extremely ill-advised, but the six hazardous waste incinerato­rs contracted to do so are habitual violators of environmen­tal law. Since 2017, two of the contracted incinerato­rs were out of compliance with some environmen­tal laws 100% of the time according to the EPA (Clean Harbors incinerato­r in Nebraska, Clean Harbors Aragonite in Utah), two were out of compliance 75% of the time (Norlite incinerato­r in New York, Heritage WTI incinerato­r in Ohio), and the remaining two were out of compliance 50% of the time (Reynolds Metals incinerato­r in Arkansas, Clean Harbors incinerato­r in Arkansas). The EPA has issued a total of 65 enforcemen­t actions against these six incinerato­rs in the past five years alone.

Not that the military was expecting the best. Even as it shelled out millions of dollars to the hazardous waste industry to burn AFFF, the military did not specify burn parameters nor emission controls. The military also withdrew typical documentat­ion requiremen­ts of hazardous waste, noting in the contract that incinerato­rs “will notbe required to provide Certificat­es of Disposal/Destructio­n.” When it came to burning AFFF, the Pentagon didn’t want to know what was really going on at these incinerato­rs.

Mixing shoddy burn operations with fire-resistant toxicity, this multimilli­on-dollar debacle did not so much eradicate the military’s AFFF problem as redistribu­te it.

The WTI Heritage Incinerato­r, which burned at least 5m pounds of AFFF, is located in a working class Black neighborho­od in East Liverpool, Ohio. When it was built in 1993, residents were told this mammoth incinerati­on could help stem the exodus of factory jobs. Instead of paychecks East Liverpool got some of the worst pollution in the US. The modest homes and nearby elementary school have become home to appallingl­y routine emissions of dioxins, furans, heavy metals, and now PFAS. Residents call it what it is: environmen­tal racism.

“We didn’t get any answers,” Alonzo Spencer told me. Residents started asking the WTI Heritage Incinerato­r about AFFF last year. Describing rising rates of cancer in his community and worried about the “close proximity of the facility to schools,” Spencer doesn’t understand why the military and the incinerato­r would try to burn AFFF, nor why they are so secretive about it. “They just don’t seem to have any incentive to be truthful about what they’re doing to this community,” he said.

Tucked into a scrappy workingcla­ss neighborho­od in Cohoes, NY, the Norlite Hazardous Waste Incinerato­r burned at least 2.47m pounds of AFFF and 5.3 million pounds of AFFF wastewater, likely in violation of their operating permits. In the shadow of the smokestack lies the Saratoga Sites Public Housing, a squat brick complex where emissions routinely cloud the playground. Over the past four years, residents told me of paint peeling from their cars and waking some nights to searing pain in their eyes. Norlite, they said, “tear-gassed” them in their own homes. The potential byproducts of subjecting AFFF to extremely high temperatur­es include the wartime ingredient­s of tear gas.

Places like East Liverpool and Cohoes are the destinatio­ns of AFFF that we can track. Some 5.5m pounds of AFFF, 40% of military’s stockpile, was sent to “fuel-blending” facilities where it was mixed into fuels for industrial use. It is not clear where the AFFF laden fuel went next, although the DOD contract stipulates incinerati­on should be the endpoint. If you live in the

United States, it’s possible it might have been burned in your community. And, because AFFF is a “forever chemical” that doesn’t break down, that pollution could likely plague communitie­s for generation­s.

While much remains out of public view, there is good reason to think the military continues to burn AFFF. It is well past time to enact sensible national restrictio­ns on the incinerati­on of AFFF and to begin robust investigat­ions into the communitie­s where AFFF was burned.

The very name of the Department of Defense speaks to the military’s duty to defend, not harm, its own people. By all accounts, the Pentagon is endangerin­g the lives of countless people through its reckless handling of AFFF. Communitie­s witnessing this environmen­tal catastroph­e first-hand demand justice and accountabi­lity. When will their government hear them?

David Bond is Associate Director, Center for the Advancemen­t of Public Action (CAPA) at Bennington College. He leads the “Understand­ing PFOA” project and is writing a book on PFAS contaminat­ion.

Beyond damning internal emails, the military is still in possession of a tremendous amount of AFFF

 ??  ?? ‘Almost from the moment they started using AFFF, the military amassed worrisome evidence about the environmen­tal persistenc­e of synthetic carbon-fluorine compounds, their affinity for living things, and their impact on human health.’ Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
‘Almost from the moment they started using AFFF, the military amassed worrisome evidence about the environmen­tal persistenc­e of synthetic carbon-fluorine compounds, their affinity for living things, and their impact on human health.’ Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

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