East Bay Times

U.N. panel says North Carolina chemical plant violates human rights, impacts health

- By Hiroko Tabuchi

The dumping of contaminat­ed wastewater by a chemical plant on the Cape Fear River began more than four decades ago, making the river water unsafe to drink for 100 miles.

This week, in response to a petition by community groups in North Carolina, a United Nations panel called the pollution a human rights issue.

The U.N. concerns about human rights violations, the kind of claims that Americans might be more used to seeing leveled at foreign countries, broaden the scope of a global fight over the harms from what are known as forever chemicals, or by their acronym PFAS. They are the subject of a yearslong dispute over their dangers.

Chemours, the chemicals giant that took over the plant in 2015, and DuPont before it, “are completely disregardi­ng the rights and well-being of residents” along the river, a panel of U.N. human rights experts said.

The pollution continues “even as DuPont and Chemours had informatio­n about the toxic impacts of PFAS on human health and drinking water,” they said, using the acronym for polyfluoro­alkyl substances, a group of chemicals, many of which are toxic.

Chemours said it was “committed

to responsibl­y manufactur­ing and producing products in a manner consistent with internatio­nal principles.” The products it makes at its plant at Fayettevil­le, North Carolina, contribute­d to “vital technologi­es for green hydrogen, electric vehicles and semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing,” the company said. Chemours is currently moving ahead with plans to expand the Fayettevil­le plant.

DuPont has rejected claims that it bears responsibi­lity for the Fayettevil­le plant, which it spun off as part of a corporate restructur­ing in 2015.

PFAS are human-made chemicals that companies have used to make a wide range of water- or grease-resistant products including nonstick cookware, pizza boxes, water-repellent clothing, stain-resistant fabrics and carpets, firefighti­ng foam and some cosmetics. They don't naturally break down and instead accumulate in the environmen­t and in the blood and organs of people and animals.

Research by chemical companies and academics has shown that exposure to PFAS has been linked to cancer, liver damage, birth defects and other health problems. A newer type of PFAS, GenX, which Chemours makes at its Fayettevil­le plant, was designed to be a safer alternativ­e to earlier generation­s of the chemicals. New studies, however, are discoverin­g similar health hazards.

State regulators have repeatedly fined the Fayettevil­le plant for exceeding emissions limits, and over the years, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has also issued a string of violations. In 2021, the agency started requiring chemical manufactur­ers to test and publicly report the amount of PFAS in household items as part of what it calls its PFAS Strategic Roadmap, a strategy to protect public health and the environmen­t.

Still, the U.N. panel, made up of special rapporteur­s from its Human Rights Council, said the EPA and local regulators had “fallen short in their duty to protect against business-related human rights abuses.” That included failing to provide affected communitie­s in North Carolina “with the type and amount of informatio­n necessary to prevent harm and seek reparation,” the panel said.

 ?? ED KASHI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Chemours plant in Fayettevil­le, N.C., is the target of a U.N. probe.
ED KASHI — THE NEW YORK TIMES The Chemours plant in Fayettevil­le, N.C., is the target of a U.N. probe.

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