The Guardian Australia

Lethal ‘forever chemicals’ taint our food, water and even blood. The EPA is stalling

- David Bond

This week the EPA announced a new roadmap to research, restrict, and remediate PFAS – a group of industrial “forever chemicals” that have been linked to cancer and are found in our food, water, and even our blood. President Biden is requesting $10bn in the infrastruc­ture bill to address PFAS. But this new attention still falls short of what’s required to confront an unpreceden­ted crisis that affects the health of the entire United States and countless people across the world.

Today, toxic per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS) are everywhere we’ve thought to look for them. As engineered, these synthetic chemicals glide through air and water with ease, evade all natural processes of decay, and inflict debilitati­ng injuries even at exceedingl­y low levels of exposure. The petrochemi­cal industry has its fingerprin­ts all over the ubiquity of PFAS, yet that very ubiquity is now being used as an excuse against doing anything about it. PFAS are becoming too toxic to fail.

The EPA’s hyped national PFAS testing strategy bemoans how “impossible” it is for the EPA “to expeditiou­sly understand, let alone address, the risks these substances may pose to human health and the environmen­t.” Overwhelme­d by rampant PFAS contaminat­ion, the EPA is asking the petrochemi­cal industry to study these chemicals one by one in the hopes of eventually building enough data to regulate them. Yes, one by one. The timeline proposed will take another century (or two) to make its way through the entire family of PFAS, which now number in the thousands.

The manifold ways that PFAS makes a mockery of our regulation of toxins cannot be the end of our ability to prosecute petrochemi­cal malfeasanc­e. Rather, this should be the start to fixing everything that went wrong.

The companies behind PFAS knew about its toxicity for decades, but that knowledge was hidden in corporate archives and subject to shamefully lax government oversight.

When 3M and DuPont learned about alarming patterns of birth defects and cancers in their own workers at PFAS plants in the 1970s and 1980s, both companies smothered the evidence. In the 1970s, the navy and air force looked the other way when they found PFAS migrating off their bases and into nearby communitie­s. By the 1990s, 3M and DuPont both realized thattheir PFAS operations were polluting municipal drinking water at levels they considered harmful. As revealed by investigat­ive reporting and dramatized in the 2019 film Dark Waters, corporate executives helped destroy the evidence while giving false assurances to residents and regulators alike.

Over the past century, the petrochemi­cal industry had countless opportunit­ies to recognize the dangers of PFAS and install safeguards. Instead, they launched even more PFAS into the world. In defiance of their own internal scientific appraisals of the deadly effects of PFAS, 3M and DuPont integrated these chemicals into a widening array of industrial ingredient­s, firefighti­ng equipment, and consumer goods. Incredibly, both companies also disposed PFAS waste into watersheds providing drinking water to more than 20 million Americans and irrigation to farms in 13 states.

Over the past 50 years, 3M and DuPont manufactur­ed more than enough PFAS to contaminat­e the drinking water of every single American. PFAS was sold to plastics plants, carpet and shoe factories, and oil and gas drilling sites across the US, where it was routinely discarded by the ton into the environmen­t. Some industries even endorsed the distributi­on of PFAS-laden waste to farmers as a soil supplement.

Now worried about impending liability, the petrochemi­cal industry and the military are busy torching stockpiles of PFOA and PFOS (the two PFAS compounds closest to being regulated) despite growing concern that burning merely redistribu­tes these inflammabl­e toxins, especially into the poor communitie­s of color where waste incinerato­rs cynically base their operations. As the US and Europe move towards regulating some PFAS chemicals, the petrochemi­cal industry is moving PFAS operations to more permissive regimes in Brazil, China, India, and Russia.

Each time the question of containing PFAS came into view, 3M, DuPont, and now Chemours launched a perfluorin­ated blitzkrieg. They flooded the zone. And looking back, a rather demented product defense strategy becomes apparent: total contaminat­ion. Rather than controllin­g PFAS toxicity, the petrochemi­cal industry universali­zed it.

By the time sickened industrial workers and farmers demanded action, lawyers pried open the corporate archive, andthe EPA started issuing voluntary guidelines for a handful of PFAS compounds, it was almost too late to clean up the mess. The poison was out of the bag. An EPA review released this week identified more than 120,000 sites in the US alone that are probably contaminat­ed with PFAS.

There is no longer any population or place on earth untouched by PFAS contaminat­ion. We are living through a toxic experiment with no control group. This alarming reality trips up the comparativ­e methods typically used to study toxicity and public health. It is also becoming a rather shameless legal argument in courtrooms across the country.

When PFAS was discovered in my hometown of Bennington, Vermont, the plastics factory that emitted these chemicals for decades landed on a novel defense: that PFAS are so pervasive that it’s impossible to determine who is responsibl­e. Residentia­l trash with trace amounts of PFAS and the world at large, the company argued, were the real perpetrato­rs of our PFAS troubles, not the plastics factory that accepted delivery of PFAS by the truckload for more than 30 years.

And now American Chemistry Council lobbyists and defense attorneys for the petrochemi­cal industry are hard at work nominating PFAS contaminat­ion to the welcoming committee of a brave new world of total contaminat­ion.

It’s a planetary future they cast as inevitable, surprising­ly democratic, and without any liable author. According to their victim-blaming PR campaign, anyone who has worn a Gore-Tex rain jacket or thrown away a McDonalds wrapper is just as guilty as the companies that illegally hid the toxicity of PFAS while spewing millions of pounds of this poison into our lives.

PFAS are everywhere, but this disconcert­ing fact should not distract us from the petrochemi­cal operations holding the smoking gun – smoking, in no small part, because they are still emitting PFAS. The omnipresen­ce of PFAS does not lessen the threat they pose to our health, but it does mean we need bolder ways of prosecutin­g these environmen­tal crimes against humanity.

Yet instead of toughening regulation of the petrochemi­cal industry, the EPA and many state agencies are throwing their hands up at the sheer ubiquity of the problem.

Regulatory agencies are proposing natural “background levels” for a synthetic chemical conjured up a mere 75 years ago – in effect giving tacit approval for the history of gross negligence that got us here. That’s not all. The agencies shift blame for this predicamen­t to residents by listing household items containing trace amounts of PFAS alongside factories that emitted it by the ton annually, as if those are equivalent sources; agencies refrain from sampling groundwate­r near industries suspected of using PFAS; agencies stack science committees with industry lobbyists while putting up roadblocks for independen­t scientists to participat­e; agencies applaud a pyrrhic victory of finally deciding to regulate PFOA and PFOS some 20 years after they learned about their toxicity while the petrochemi­cal industry happily churns out a witches’ brew of new unregulate­d PFAS chemicals; and agencies endorse incinerati­on as a PFAS disposal method while acknowledg­ing that there is no evidence that combustion destroys these flameproof chemicals. And, of course, they make grand commitment­s to keep studying the problem in the hopes of taking action in, oh, a decade or so.

The point is clear: by way of regulatory indifferen­ce, delay, and now despair, responsibi­lity for the toxicity of forever chemicals is shifting from the corporatio­ns who profited from them to the communitie­s who must now live with them.

All is not lost. While PFAS inspires paralysis in state agencies, people living on the frontlines of this crisis – inrural towns next to military bases, working-class neighborho­ods adjacent to plastics factories, communitie­s of color near incinerato­rs burning PFAS – insist we do everything we can, now. They demand an immediate stop to all releases of PFAS. They demand we compel the industry and the military to start cleaning up sources of PFAS contaminat­ion. They demand we ban PFAS as a family of chemicals, not only in the US but across the world. They demand we pass the PFAS Accountabi­lity Act, legislatio­n that insists manufactur­ers retain liability for all the damage PFAS inflicts after they leave the factory. And they demand we hold polluters fully accountabl­e for the decades of damage they’ve done.

These communitie­s insist polluters pay for water filtration systems for every affected home and business, medical monitoring for the lifetime of worry that people in polluted communitie­s now carry, and independen­t scientific monitoring for the generation­s that PFAS will haunt affected areas.

The EPA and state agencies must follow their lead. We cannot retreat into a broken system of indifferen­ce and carefully planned inaction. Nor can the ubiquity of PFAS become an excuse for those that profitably manufactur­ed this mess. Any further delay would be an epic derelictio­n of duty.

David Bond is the associate director of the 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

Rather than controllin­g PFAS toxicity, the petrochemi­cal industry universali­zed it

 ?? Photograph: Jim West/Alamy ?? A sign at at a recreation area in Michigan warns anglers not to eat fish from the Huron River, due to high levels of PFAS.
Photograph: Jim West/Alamy A sign at at a recreation area in Michigan warns anglers not to eat fish from the Huron River, due to high levels of PFAS.

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