The Guardian (USA)

US firms exploiting Trump-era loophole over toxic ‘forever chemicals’

- Tom Perkins

Chemical companies are dodging a federal law designed to track how many PFAS “forever chemicals” their plants are dischargin­g into the environmen­t by exploiting a loophole created in the Trump administra­tion’s final months, a new analysis of federal records has found.

The Fiscal Year 2020 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act put in place requiremen­ts that companies dischargin­g over 100lb annually of the dangerous chemicals report the releases to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA). But during the implementa­tion process, Trump’s EPA created an unusual loophole that at least five chemical companies have exploited.

The amount of PFAS being discharged into the air, water or disposed of on land “could be much higher than we already know”, said Jared Hayes, a policy analyst with the Environmen­tal Working Group (EWG) and a report coauthor.

“Allowing manufactur­ers to skirt reporting requiremen­ts has serious public health consequenc­es for communitie­s that live near facilities that use PFAS and they have a right to know how many forever chemicals companies are releasing,” he wrote.

PFAS are a class of about 12,000 chemicals typically used to make thousands of products resist water, stain and heat. They are called “forever chemicals” because they do not naturally break down, and accumulate in humans and the environmen­t. A growing body of evidence links them to serious health problems like cancer, birth defects, liver disease and autoimmune disorders.

The chemicals are estimated to be contaminat­ing drinking water for over 200 million people in the US, and state and federal regulators have passed a barrage of new legislatio­n in recent years designed to rein in pollution.

Public health advocates say PFAS discharges from chemical plants have sickened residents living near or downstream from them. Contaminat­ion from a Chemours factory in North Carolina has contaminat­ed hundreds of square miles around the facility, and DuPont paid $670m (£610m) for sickening thousands of residents near its West Virginia PFAS production plant.

EWG’s analysis of federal reporting records identified five plants dischargin­g unknown amounts of 14 PFAS compounds, though there may be more.

The Trump EPA gave PFAS an unusual exemption under the law that allows companies not to report discharges if the amounts are “negligible”, which is defined as less than 1% of a total mixture. The rule is referred to as the “de minimis exemption”.

Companies dischargin­g thousands of pounds of PFAS could have gotten their releases under the 1% threshold via several routes, said Melanie Benesh, EWG’s vice-president of government affairs. Companies may have added water to PFAS to dilute it to the point that it is below 1%. However, the total amount of PFAS released is still high, and may present a threat once in the environmen­t.

Companies may also be using complex mixtures with multiple PFAS. If the companies keep any one PFAS compound below the 1% threshold, then they won’t have to report it, even if the total amount of all PFAS compounds in the mixture far exceeds 1%.

“The reason we have the [reporting law] is so communitie­s downstream from those facilities know what’s in their water, so if you have companies that are avoiding reporting then it undermines the purpose of the law,” Benesh said.

In a statement to the Guardian, an EPA spokespers­on said the agency is aware of the loophole and has begun the process to potentiall­y close it.

Benesh said she is uncertain why the Trump administra­tion would agree to create the loophole, but noted that chemical companies or trade groups asked for the exemption during implementa­tion’s public comment. Meanwhile, the American Chemistry Council, a trade group representi­ng companies that avoided reporting PFAS discharges, had lobbied the EPA office in charge of implementi­ng the law.

The NDAA required companies managing and disposing of 180 dif

ferent kinds of PFAS over 100lb (45kg) annually to report their releases to the EPA’s toxics release inventory (TRI).

Separately, the chemical data reporting rule (CDR) already required companies that use PFAS in volumes more than 2,500lb (1,134kg) annually to report use data.

The EPA last year noticed companies that handled or produced large volumes of PFAS and reported to the CDR did nor report discharges under the TRI. Companies contacted by the agency cited the 1% de minimis exemption as the reason for not reporting.

Allowing PFAS to be exempted under de minimis is “clearly at odds with Congress’s intent”, Hayes wrote. Lawmakers intentiona­lly set the 100lb (45kg)-reporting threshold because all substances with such low reporting levels are labeled “chemicals of special concern”.

Manufactur­ers cannot use the de minimis exemption to avoid reporting releases of chemicals of special concern. But when the Trump EPA implemente­d the law, it did not include PFAS as a chemical of special concern, and instead gave it a designatio­n with chemicals with reporting thresholds of 10,000 pounds or above, Hayes wrote.

PFAS are the only chemicals with a 100lb (45kg) reporting limit that can use the exemption.

“EPA’s de minimis loophole gives companies an opportunit­y to keep their pollution secret, which goes against the very purpose of the toxic release inventory,” said Tim Whitehouse, a former EPA attorney and executive director of Public Employees for Environmen­tal Responsibi­lity.

In a statement to the Guardian, the EPA said its proposed rule changes include removing the eligibilit­y of the 1% exemption for PFAS, designatin­g PFAS as a chemical of concern, and “reversing the approach set forth by the previous administra­tion”.

 ?? ?? Photograph: Drew YoungeDyke/AP A sign in Oscoda, Michigan, warns hunters not to eat deer because of high amounts of toxic chemicals in their meat.
Photograph: Drew YoungeDyke/AP A sign in Oscoda, Michigan, warns hunters not to eat deer because of high amounts of toxic chemicals in their meat.

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