The Guardian (USA)

New ‘forever chemicals' contaminat­ing the environmen­t, regulators say

- Ryan Felton of Consumer Reports

Earlier this year, federal and state researcher­s reported finding a new, potentiall­y dangerous chemical in soil samples from multiple locations in New Jersey. The compound was a form of PFAS, a group of more than 5,000 chemicals that have raised concerns in recent years because of their potential link to learning delays in children and cancer, as well as their tendency to last in the environmen­t for a long time.

But the new revelation­s, reported in the June issue of Science magazine, stoked concerns among water-quality researcher­s and advocacy groups for other reasons, too. It underscore­d how easy it is for manufactur­ers to phase out their use of PFAS (per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances) once the substances have been regulated, and replace them with newer, related compounds that researcher­s know even less about. And it showed how difficult it is for regulators to track and oversee these new compounds.

The authors of the Science report, from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the New Jersey department of environmen­tal protection (DEP), identified the West Deptford, New Jersey, plant of a company called Solvay Specialty Polymers USA, a division of the Belgian chemical giant Solvay SA, as the likely source of the contaminat­ion.

Solvay, in a statement to Consumer Reports, denies it is responsibl­e.

But Solvay has been cited by the New Jersey DEP in the past for contaminat­ion of soil and water with an older, now-regulated PFAS compound. And the company has used a replacemen­t PFAS at the facility for years, despite having failed to implement an official way for regulators or independen­t researcher­s to analyze whether the new compound is present in the environmen­t, according to documents obtained by Consumer Reports through a public records request.

Through that request, CR sought documents and communicat­ions between Solvay and the agency related to the chemicals identified in the Science study, and received more than 240 pages of filings that highlight the company’s use of a PFAS replacemen­t at its facility.

The records shed light on the struggle that regulators in New Jersey face in identifyin­g the environmen­tal risks posed at the Solvay plant, as well as the debate between both sides over how to remediate the company’s substitute compound and limit new types of PFAS from being used in the future.

The New Jersey DEP tells CR it believes Solvay is using “one or more” of the replacemen­t compounds identified in the Science study at the company’s facility. The replacemen­ts are “expected to have toxicity” and other properties similar to currently regulated PFAS compounds, the agency says. The DEP declined to answer questions about whether Solvay’s replacemen­t compounds have been detected in public water supplies.

“The DEP will continue to use the best science available to evaluate emerging contaminan­ts to protect New Jersey’s public health and environmen­t,” the DEP says.

Environmen­tal and health advocates say that because it takes years to assess the risk of chemicals like Solvay’s new substitute, PFAS should be regulated as a group, with new compounds subject to the same regulation­s as previously identified ones.

The American Chemistry Council, an industry group, objects to that idea, saying that each compound is different, so the compounds should be regulated individual­ly.

Erik Olson, senior strategic director of health and food at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal organizati­on, says that approach is impractica­l and unnecessar­y. “We don’t want to continue on this toxic treadmill,” he says, “where one PFAS chemical is phased out only to be replaced by one of literally thousands of others that have similar chemical structures and can reasonably be expected to pose similar environmen­tal and health risks.”

A fraught history

Until 2010, Solvay had used a PFAS compound at its New Jersey manufactur­ing facility called PFNA (perfluoron­onanoic acid), which preliminar­y research indicates may be linked to immune system and liver problems. A year earlier, New Jersey’s DEP detected the contaminan­t in public water supplies in Paulsboro, a community near the plant. The New Jersey DEP now attributes continued PFNA contaminat­ion around the facility to Solvay.

The company retained a licensed remediatio­n expert to assess that claim, and says it has spent more than $25m in the process. In April, the company told the DEP that it remains committed to investigat­ing and remediatin­g PFNA impacts attributed to the West Deptford facility, according to records obtained by CR.

But the company steadfastl­y denies responsibi­lity for all PFNA contaminat­ion. In an April 21 letter to the DEP, Solvay alleges the department has maintained a “long-held erroneous belief” that the company is responsibl­e for all PFNA contaminat­ion near its facility, and points to what it says are other possible nearby sources, including a former manufactur­ing site and a fire-training academy that uses firefighti­ng foam, a known source of PFAS.

“DEP has yet to act on this informatio­n, either to investigat­e and remediate these PFAS discharges itself, or to require the discharger­s to do so,” the company says.

The DEP declined to comment about Solvay’s claim. But the agency has previously said Solvay’s science does not support the conclusion that alternativ­e sources are to blame for PFNA contaminat­ion.

In 2018, New Jersey adopted strict limits on how much PFNA can be present in drinking water. And a year later, the state directed multiple companies, including Solvay, to address PFAS contaminat­ion in the state. The state claims in the directive that Solvay knew it was dischargin­g “large amounts” of PFNA into the environmen­t from the facility at least as early as 1991. The company, the state alleges, “knew or should have known of the adverse effects of PFNA exposure” because an industry group of which it is a member had conducted toxicology studies in the 2000s.

This story is co-published in partnershi­p with Consumer Reports. It is an extract of a longer piece which can be read in full on the Consumer Reports website. Consumer Reports has no financial relationsh­ip with any advertiser on this site

We don’t want to continue on this toxic treadmill

Erik Olson

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Solvay steadfastl­y denies responsibi­lity for all PFNA contaminat­ion.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images Solvay steadfastl­y denies responsibi­lity for all PFNA contaminat­ion.

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