The Guardian (USA)

Radioactiv­e material and pesticides among new contaminan­ts found in US tap water

- Tom Perkins

Water utilities and regulators in the US have identified 56 new contaminan­ts in drinking water over the past two years, a list that includes dangerous substances linked to a range of health problems such as cancer, reproducti­ve disruption, liver disease and much more.

The revelation is part of an analysis of the nation’s water utilities’ contaminat­ion records by the Environmen­tal Working Group, a clean water advocate that has now updated its database for the first time since 2019.

It found that the jump is partly driven by newly identified PFAS, a toxic class of “forever chemicals” that are widely used across dozens of industries and are thought to be contaminat­ing drinking water for more than 100 million people. Pesticides, water disinfecta­nt byproducts and radioactiv­e materials are among other substances identified by regulators.

Though the new contaminan­t list is disturbing, it would be much longer if regulators and utilities were properly monitoring the nation’s water supply, said the EWG senior scientist Tasha Stoiber.

“It speaks to the fact that we don’t have nearly strong enough regulation­s in place to protect drinking water, and the regulation process is much too slow,” she said. “We’re testing for things that are already in our drinking water after the fact … and we’re not keeping pace with these chemicals.”

The list includes some substances that have been in production and used for years, but are only now being monitored by regulators as their links to health problems become clear. Other contaminan­ts include those that industry is only beginning to use in larger quantities.

Many of the substances were identified as part of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s unregulate­d contaminan­t monitoring rule (UMCR), which is one of the first steps in the regulation process. It tracks chemicals’ presence in some water systems and its aim is to provide the EPA with a picture of how widespread a chemical’s contaminat­ion is before new limits are establishe­d.

Among other substances detected is HAA-9, a byproduct of the drinking water disinfecti­on process. Regulators previously set limits for HAA-5, a contaminan­t in the same family that was found to cause health problems. Industry claimed HAA-9 was safe, but recent studies linked it to low birthrate, so the EPA is beginning to track it.

However, setting limits can be a lengthy process, and the EPA has failed to set a new limit under the UMCR in the 20 years since the rule was implemente­d. The agency found what Stoiber characteri­zed as “eye-opening” levels of PFAS compounds in 2013 yet is aiming to set water limits for just two kinds by next year.

Other contaminan­ts in the new list were detected by states that are moving to put stricter regulation­s in place for chemicals, like PFAS.

In the meantime, there’s little that people can do beyond educating themselves about which contaminan­ts are in their water system, buying filters and advocating for stronger regulation­s. EWG’s database allows users to search for contaminan­ts in water systems by zip code, and it provides a guide on which chemicals water filters can remove.

“Everyone can be educated,” Stoiber said. “Contact the local utility, ask them questions about what they’re doing … and push for stronger regulation­s that protect people’s health.”

 ?? PhotoAlto/Antoine Arraou/Getty Images ?? ‘We don’t have nearly strong enough regulation­s to protect drinking water, and the regulation process is much too slow.’ Photograph:
PhotoAlto/Antoine Arraou/Getty Images ‘We don’t have nearly strong enough regulation­s to protect drinking water, and the regulation process is much too slow.’ Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States