The Guardian Australia

Pentagon causing toxic pollution by burning foam, campaigner­s say

- Daniel Ross

The Department of Defense is polluting the environmen­t with toxic chemicals by continuing to incinerate a vast stockpile of firefighti­ng foam in a move environmen­talists say is in breach of new regulation­s.

In a letter sent last week to the secretary of defense, Mark Esper, several environmen­tal organizati­ons argue the defense department is already out of compliance with new provisions regulating the disposal of the material and insist that it “immediatel­y cease” incinerati­on of the foam – called AFFF – which puts communitie­s at risk.

AFFF is laced with toxic chemicals called PFOS and PFOA, two compounds belonging to a larger family of potentiall­y toxic chemicals called per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS).

These chemicals have been linked to serious health problems such as cancer, kidney and thyroid disease, and pregnancy complicati­ons. The defense department used AFFF for decades, leading to widespread contaminat­ion of ground and drinking water at military bases nationwide.

The National Defense Authorizat­ion Act says AFFF incinerati­on must now be conducted in accordance with the Clean Air Act (CAA) at permitted hazardous waste facilities.

But Erik Olson, the Natural Resources Defense Council’s senior director for health and food, said: “There’s a need for much more significan­t research and regulatory action to make sure that disposal is done in a way that doesn’t just move the environmen­tal problem around.”

Sonya Lunder, the Sierra Club’s senior toxics adviser for its gender, equity and environmen­t program, warned that incinerati­on is unlikely to fully break down toxic chemicals in AFFF, leading to PFAS compounds, including possible greenhouse gases, being emitted into the environmen­t.

The Guardian reported in December that these compounds have been detected in rainwater across the country at levels high enough to trigger regulatory action if found in drinking water.

Experts also voice concern over the poor compliance histories at certain hazardous waste incinerato­rs and the proximity to these plants of lowincome, vulnerable communitie­s.

The Veolia-owned hazardous waste incinerato­r in Sauget, Illinois, for example, has been issued a high-priority violation of the CAA every quarter for the past three years. Over half of the population within a three-mile radius of the plant live below the poverty level.

For Mamie Cosey, who lives less than a mile from the Veolia plant in Sauget, the defense department “absolutely” should not be allowed to inci

nerate AFFF so close to her home, she said. “Why do the residents have to suffer just because someone says that this is safe?”

Just turned 79, retired teacher Cosey is the guardian of three teenage great-grandchild­ren, and the “terrible” pollution already emitted from the plant causes her to worry that their asthma, headaches and other health issues will worsen, she said.

“I don’t have but a few more years to live,” Cosey said. “But my greatgrand­children –how will they grow up?

What’s the lasting effect of this on their life?”

Instead of incinerati­on, said Lunder, the foam should be disposed of with technologi­es like those used to destroy the nation’s stockpile of obsolete chemical weapons.

Indeed, the air force has already solicited proposals for alternativ­e disposal techniques, citing possible key failures with incinerati­on.

Maureen Sullivan, deputy assistant secretary of defense for environmen­t, wrote in a statement that the defense department has been incinerati­ng PFAS materials at hazardous waste facilities since 2016, “as it is more protective of human health and the environmen­t”.

The defense department did not answer how much AFFF is awaiting disposal. Early last year, the Intercept reported that the DoD was waiting to destroy 2m gallons of foam and contaminat­ed water.

 ?? Photograph: Jake May/The Flint Journal/AP ?? PFAS foam in Oscoda Township, Michigan, near the former Wurtsmith air force base.
Photograph: Jake May/The Flint Journal/AP PFAS foam in Oscoda Township, Michigan, near the former Wurtsmith air force base.

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