Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Forever chemicals’ a vital part of our national security, US military says

Substances have been linked to health problems such as cancer

- By Patricia Kime KFF Health News KFF Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

The Department of Defense relies on hundreds, if not thousands, of weapons and products such as uniforms, batteries, and microelect­ronics that contain PFAS, a family of chemicals linked to serious health conditions.

Now, as regulators propose restrictio­ns on their use or manufactur­ing, Pentagon officials have told Congress that eliminatin­g the chemicals would undermine military readiness.

PFAS, known as “forever chemicals” because they don’t break down in the environmen­t and can build up in the human body, have been associated with such health problems as cancer. In July, a new federal study showed a direct link between testicular cancer and PFOS, a PFAS chemical that has been found in the blood of thousands of military personnel.

Congress has pressured the Defense Department to clean up U.S. military sites and take health concerns more seriously. Under the fiscal 2023 James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, the Pentagon was required to assess the ubiquity of perand polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, in products and equipment used by the military.

In a report delivered to Congress in August, Defense Department officials pushed back against health concerns raised by environmen­tal groups and regulators.

“DOD is reliant on the critically important chemical and physical properties of PFAS to provide required performanc­e for the technologi­es and consumable items and articles which enable military readiness and sustainmen­t,” the authors said.

Further, they wrote: “Losing access to PFAS due to overly broad regulation­s or severe market contractio­ns would greatly impact national security and Dod’s ability to fulfill its mission.”

According to the report, most major weapons systems, their components, microelect­ronic chips, lithium-ion batteries, and other products contain PFAS chemicals. These include helicopter­s, airplanes, submarines, missiles, torpedoes, tanks, and assault vehicles; munitions; semiconduc­tors and microelect­ronics; and metalworki­ng, cooling, and fire suppressio­n systems — the latter especially aboard Navy ships.

PFAS are also present in textiles such as uniforms, footwear, tents and duffel bags, for which the chemicals help repel water and oil and increase durability, as well as nuclear, chemical and biological warfare protective gear, the report says.

The Pentagon’s report to Congress was released last month by the American Chemistry Council.

Defending a tradition

Military officials’ defense of PFAS use comes as concerns mount over the health risks associated with the chemicals. Beyond cancer, some types of PFAS have been linked to low birth weight, developmen­tal delays in children, thyroid dysfunctio­n, and reduced response to immunizati­ons. Health concerns grew with the release of the study definitive­ly linking testicular cancer in military firefighte­rs to a foam retardant containing PFAS.

But that wasn’t the first time U.S. military officials were warned about the potential health threat. In the 1970s, Air Force researcher­s found that firefighti­ng foam containing PFAS was poisonous to fish and, by the 1980s, to mice.

In 1991, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers told Fort Carson, Colo., to stop using firefighti­ng retardants containing PFAS because they were “considered hazardous material in a number of states.”

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has struggled to determine whether there are acceptable levels of PFAS in drinking water supplies, given the existence of hundreds of varieties of these chemicals. But in March, the EPA did propose federal limits on the levels of PFAS in drinking water supplies.

The regulation would dramatical­ly reduce limits on six types of the chemicals, with caps on the most common compounds, known as PFOA and PFOS, at 4 parts per trillion. Currently, the Defense Department’s threshold for drinking water is 70 parts per trillion based on a 2016 EPA advisory. As part of a widespread testing program, if levels are found on installati­ons or in communitie­s above that amount, the military furnishes alternativ­e drinking water supplies.

The Defense Department has used Pfas-laced firefighti­ng foam along with other products containing the chemicals for more than a half-century, leading to the contaminat­ion of at least 359 military sites or nearby communitie­s, with an additional 248 under investigat­ion, according to the department.

In its report, however, the Department of Defense did not address the health concerns and noted that there is “no consensus definition of PFAS as a chemical class.” Further, it said the broad term, which addresses thousands of human-made chemical chains, “does not inform whether a compound is harmful or not.”

Researcher­s with the Environmen­tal Working Group, an advocacy group that focuses on PFAS contaminat­ion nationwide, said the report lacked acknowledg­ment of the health risks or concerns posed by PFAS and ignored the availabili­ty of Pfas-free replacemen­ts for material, tents and duffel bags.

The military report also did not address possible solutions or research on NON-PFAS alternativ­es or address replacemen­t costs, noted EWG’S Jared Hayes, a senior policy analyst, and David Andrews, a senior scientist.

“It’s kind of like that report you turn in at school,” Andrews said, “when you get a comment back that you did the minimum amount possible.”

Andrews added that the report fell short in effort and scope.

The Defense Department announced this year it would stop buying firefighti­ng foam containing PFAS by year’s end and phase it out in 2024. It stopped using the foam for training in 2020, by order of Congress.

The report noted, however, that while new Navy ships are being designed with alternativ­e fire suppressio­n systems such as water mists, “limited use of (Pfas-containing systems) remains for those spaces where the alternativ­es are not appropriat­e,” such as existing ships where there is no alternativ­e foam that could be swapped into current systems.

According to the report, “the safety and survivabil­ity of naval ships and crew” from fires on ships depends on current Pfas-based firefighti­ng foams and their use will continue until a capable alternativ­e is found.

Pervasive yet elusive

Commercial­ly, PFAS chemicals are used in food packaging, nonstick cookware, stain repellents, cosmetics and other consumer products.

The fiscal 2023 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act also required the Defense Department to identify consumer products containing PFAS and stop purchasing them, including nonstick cookware and utensils in dining facilities and ship galleys as well as stain-repellent upholstere­d furniture, carpeting and rugs.

But in a briefing to Congress in August accompanyi­ng the report on essential uses, Pentagon officials said they couldn’t comply with the law’s deadline of April 1, 2023, because manufactur­ers don’t usually disclose the levels of PFAS in their products and no federal laws require them to do so.

Come Jan. 1, however, makers of these chemicals and products containing them will be required to identify these chemicals and notify “downstream” manufactur­ers of other products of the levels of PFAS contained in such products and ingredient­s, even in low concentrat­ions, according to a federal rule published Oct. 31 by the EPA.

This would include household items like shampoo, dental floss and food containers.

Officials reiterated that the Defense Department is committed to phasing out nonessenti­al and noncritica­l products containing PFAS, including those named above as well as food packaging and personal protective firefighti­ng equipment.

And it is “developing an approach” to remove items containing PFAS from military stores, known as exchanges, also required by the fiscal 2023 NDAA.

Risk-benefit assessment­s

In terms of “mission-critical PFAS uses,” however, the Pentagon said the chemicals provide “significan­t benefits to the framework of U.S. critical infrastruc­ture and national and economic security.”

Andrews of EWG noted that the industry is stepping up production of the chemicals due to market demand and added that the federal government has not proposed banning PFAS chemicals, as the Defense Department alluded to when it emphasized the critical role these substances play in national security and warned against “overly broad regulation­s.”

“The statements are completely unsubstant­iated, and it’s almost a fearmonger­ing statement,” Andrews said. “I think the statement is really going beyond anything that’s even being considered in the regulatory space.”

“There haven’t been realistic proposals policy-wise of a complete ban on PFAS,” his colleague Hayes added. “What people have been pushing for and talking about are certain categories of products where there are viable alternativ­es, where there is a Pfasfree option. But to ban it outright? I haven’t really seen that as a realistic policy proposal.”

Kevin Fay, executive director of the Sustainabl­e PFAS Action Network, a coalition of corporatio­ns, industry advocates, and researcher­s who support the use and management of PFAS compounds, said the Defense Department has a point and it is up to federal regulators to “responsibl­y manage” these chemicals and their use to strike a balance among environmen­tal, health, and industrial needs.

“The U.S. Department of Defense’s report on critical PFAS uses is crystal clear: regulating PFAS through a onesize fits all approach will gravely harm national security and economic competitiv­eness,” Fay wrote in an email to KFF Health News.

Adding that not all PFAS compounds are the same and arguing that not all are harmful to human health, Fay said risk-based categoriza­tion and control is vital to the continued use of the chemicals.

But, he added, in locations where the chemicals pose a risk to human health, the government should act.

“The federal government should implement plans to identify and remediate contaminat­ed sites, properly identify risk profiles of the many types of PFAS compounds, and encourage innovation by clearing the regulatory path for viable alternativ­es to specific dangerous compounds,” Fay wrote.

Assessment­s are completed or underway at 714 active and former military installati­ons, National Guard facilities, and other former defense sites to determine the extent of contaminat­ion in groundwate­r, soil and the water supply to these locations and nearby communitie­s.

Last year, the Pentagon issued a temporary moratorium on burning materials containing PFAS. Studies have shown that the practice can release toxic gases. But on July 11, the Defense Department lifted the moratorium on incinerati­on, along with interim guidance on PFAS disposal.

Military personnel who were exposed to PFAS — including through firefighti­ng foam — say they live in fear that they or their family members will develop cancer.

“I’ve got more of some of those materials in my system than (90%) of those on the planet. This is bad. It doesn’t go away,” said Christian Jacobs, who served in the Army for four years and worked as a civilian Defense Department firefighte­r for nearly three decades. “It keeps me up at night.”

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK.COM ?? Congress has pressured the Defense Department to clean up U.S. military sites and take health concerns more seriously. Under the fiscal 2023 James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, the Pentagon, above, was required to assess the ubiquity of per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, in products and equipment used by the military.
SHUTTERSTO­CK.COM Congress has pressured the Defense Department to clean up U.S. military sites and take health concerns more seriously. Under the fiscal 2023 James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, the Pentagon, above, was required to assess the ubiquity of per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, in products and equipment used by the military.
 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eva Stebel, a water researcher, pours a sample into a smaller glass container for experiment­ation as part of drinking water and PFAS research Feb. 16 at the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Center For Environmen­tal Solutions and Emergency Response in Cincinnati.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Eva Stebel, a water researcher, pours a sample into a smaller glass container for experiment­ation as part of drinking water and PFAS research Feb. 16 at the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Center For Environmen­tal Solutions and Emergency Response in Cincinnati.

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