The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

3M to pay $850 million to settle suit over chemical disposal

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MINNEAPOLI­S » 3M Co. has agreed to pay the state of Minnesota $850 million to settle a major case alleging the manufactur­er damaged natural resources and contaminat­ed groundwate­r by disposing of chemicals over decades, attorneys announced Tuesday.

The state was seeking $5 billion from Maplewood, Minnesotab­ased 3M in a case that focused on the company’s disposal of chemicals once used to make Scotchgard fabric protector and other products. The lawsuit, filed in 2010, alleged 3M damaged Minnesota’s natural resources, including more than 100 miles of the Mississipp­i River, and contaminat­ed drinking water, harmed wildlife and posed a threat to human health.

The company denies it did anything wrong, insisting it was acting legally at the time.

Attorney General Lori Swanson said the settlement money will go toward projects to clean up and safeguard drinking water in the eastern suburbs of St. Paul. The settlement was announced Tuesday after jury selection was halted as the trial was set to begin.

The lawsuit was centered on 3M’s disposal of perfluoroc­hemicals, or PFCs, and their compounds. The company began producing PFCs in the 1950s and legally disposed of them in landfills for decades. Along with Scotchgard, the chemicals were used in fire retardants, paints, nonstick cookware and other products.

The company stopped making PFCs in 2002 after negotiatin­g with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which said the chemicals could pose long-term risks to human health and the environmen­t. But in 2004, trace amounts of the chemicals were found in groundwate­r at 3M dumping sites east of St. Paul.

The state and 3M reached a deal three years later requiring the company to spend millions to clean up landfills and provide clean drinking water to affected communitie­s.

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