The Citizen (KZN)

Rainwater is ‘unsafe’

‘FOREVER CHEMICALS’: STUDY FINDS TOXIC LEVELS EXCEED GUIDELINES There is nowhere on earth where the rain would be safe to drink, says expert.

- Stockholm

Rainwater everywhere on the planet is unsafe to drink due to levels of toxic chemicals known as PFAS that exceed the latest guidelines, according to a new study by Stockholm University scientists.

Commonly known as “forever chemicals” because they disintegra­te extremely slowly, PFAS, or per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, were initially found in packaging, shampoo or make-up but have spread to our entire environmen­t, including water and air.

“There is nowhere on earth where the rain would be safe to drink, according to the measuremen­ts that we have taken,” said Ian Cousins, a professor at the university and the lead author of the study published in Environmen­tal Science and Technology.

A compilatio­n of the data since 2010 that his team studied showed that “even in Antarctica or the Tibetan plateau, the levels in the rainwater are above the drinking water guidelines that the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency [EPA] proposed”, he said.

Normally considered pristine, the two regions still have PFAS levels “14 times higher” than the US drinking water guidelines.

The EPA recently lowered its PFAS guidelines significan­tly after discoverin­g that the chemicals may affect the immune response in children to vaccines, Cousins noted. Once ingested, PFAS accumulate in the body.

According to some studies, exposure can also lead to problems with fertility, developmen

tal delays in children, increased risks of obesity or certain cancers (prostate, kidney and testicular), an increase in cholestero­l levels.

Cousins said PFAS were now “so persistent” and ubiquitous that they will never disappear from the planet.

“We have made the planet inhospitab­le to human life by irreversib­ly contaminat­ing it now so that nothing is clean any more. And to the point that’s it’s not clean enough to be safe,” he said.

“We have crossed a planetary boundary,” he said, referring to a central paradigm for evaluating earth’s capacity to absorb the impact of human activity.

However, Cousins noted that PFAS levels in people have actually dropped “quite significan­tly in the last 20 years” and “ambient levels [of PFAS in the environmen­t] have been the same for the past 20 years”.

“What’s changed is the guidelines. They’ve gone down millions of times since the early 2000s, because we’ve learned more about the toxicity of these substances.”

Cousins said we have to learn to live with it.

“I’m not super concerned about the everyday exposure in mountain or stream water or in the food. We can’t escape it... we’re just going to have to live with it.”

“But it’s not a great situation to be in, where we’ve contaminat­ed the environmen­t to the point where background exposure is not really safe.” –

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