Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pennsylvan­ia now has limits on forever chemicals

- By Anya Litvak

Pennsylvan­ia has enacted a limit on two PFAS chemicals in drinking water, marking the first time that the state has set its own limits instead of adopting a federal standard.

The state’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection in November proposed the rule that would limit perfluoroo­ctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluoroo­ctanoic acid (PFOA) to 18 parts per trillion and 14 parts per trillion respective­ly, after sampling performed on more than 400 public water systems in Pennsylvan­ia found detectable levels of those chemicals in more than a quarter of them.

PFAS — shorthand for per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances — is the umbrella term for about 6,000 human-made chemicals embedded in many products since the 1930s and 1940s.

They’ve been added to cookware to make it nonstick, to carpeting, food packaging and firefighti­ng foam, to name a few. The Pennsylvan­ia rule regulates just two of the compounds, which as the most prevalent in the class.

Manufactur­ers have mostly phased out using these chemicals, but they remain present in air, soil and water because they do not break down, earning them the moniker of “forever chemicals.”

The federal government has no mandated limits for these chemicals. Instead, in 2016, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency put out a health advisory, recommendi­ng that the levels of PFOSs and PFOAs in drinking water should not exceed 70 parts per trillion.

Recent health research suggests that’s not protective enough to avoid adverse impacts on human developmen­t and immune system function.

The state Department of Environmen­tal Protection’s rule notes that PFAS exposure has been potentiall­y linked to “high cholestero­l, developmen­tal effects including low birth weight, liver toxicity, decreased immune response, thyroid disease, kidney disease, ulcerative colitis and certain cancers, including testicular cancer and kidney cancer.”

“We are still learning more about these chemicals, and these new maximum contaminan­t levels are a step in the right direction,” the department’s acting Secretary Ramez Ziadeh said in a statement.

The PFOA and PFOS limits apply to more than 3,100 water systems in the state that serve around 90% of Pennsylvan­ia’s population.

Larger water systems — those that serve at least 350 people — must begin complying on Jan. 1, 2024. Smaller systems have an extra year after that.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is working on its own rule to regulate the chemicals and had said it would publish a proposal in December, with a final rule coming at the end of this year.

But the federal agency has yet to release its proposed rule, the Pennsylvan­ia DEP noted, and even when it does, that rule is not expected to go into effect until three years after being finalized.

In adopting its own rules now, Pennsylvan­ia joins seven other states that have already set limits on PFAS chemicals.

The state’s goal in crafting its regulation­s is to achieve a 90% improvemen­t in health outcomes over the federal recommende­d standard of 70 parts per trillion, the DEP said.

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