Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Netherland­s seeks legal options against 3M over river pollution

- DIEDERIK BAAZIL

The Netherland­s is exploring its legal options against chemical giant 3M over pollution in the Dutch part of the Scheldt river.

For years, the company’s Antwerp, Belgium-based factory seeped contaminat­ed groundwate­r into the Scheldt, a 217-mile river that starts in France and runs through Belgium and the Netherland­s, into the North Sea.

The Dutch government is now investigat­ing the link between 3M’s operations in Antwerp and perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, contaminat­ion that officials recently discovered in the Western Scheldt in the Dutch province of Zeeland.

The Netherland­s “is currently mapping out the legal options for holding 3M responsibl­e for the PFAS damage in the Western Scheldt,” said Liz Zoetekouw, a spokespers­on for the Ministry of Infrastruc­ture and Water Management by email.

PFAS, used to make products like rain coats, is called the “forever chemical” because it’s nearly impossible to remove. It accumulate­s over time in the soil, the water and in human bodies and is associated with a host of health problems.

A spokespers­on for 3M said the company declines to speculate about potential litigation.

“3M will continue to remediate PFAS where we are responsibl­e, reduce use of PFAS in our products, and address litigation when it arises,” Corne Bekkers, a spokespers­on for the company said in an emailed response.

3M’s manufactur­ing activities over several decades caused widespread contaminat­ion in the area surroundin­g its Antwerp factory, Bloomberg Businesswe­ek reported in June. The government of the Flanders region in Belgium ordered 3M to shut down production of almost all PFAS chemicals after activists exposed the extent of the contaminat­ion around the factory, and tests on almost 800 local residents showed the vast majority had unsafe levels in their bloodstrea­m.

The St. Paul, Minnesotab­ased company already agreed with the Flemish government to pay $609 million in damages. The company also faces possible civil cases by people suffering from related health issues.

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