The Guardian (USA)

3M pays $10.3bn to settle water pollution suit over ‘forever chemicals’

-

3M Co has reached a $10.3bn settlement with a host of US public water systems to resolve water pollution claims tied to “forever chemicals”, the chemical company announced on Thursday.

The company said the settlement would provide the funds over a 13-year period to cities, towns and other public water systems to test for and treat contaminat­ion from per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS.

3M, which is facing thousands of lawsuits over PFAS contaminat­ion, did not admit liability, and said the money will help support remediatio­n at public water systems that detect PFAS “at any level”.

“We have reached the largest drinking water settlement in American history, which will be used to help filter PFAS from drinking water that is served to the public,” Scott Summy, a lead attorney for the water systems suing 3M, said in a statement.

3M had been scheduled to face a test trial in South Carolina federal court earlier this month in a lawsuit brought by city of Stuart, Florida. The judge overseeing the case delayed the trial the morning it was set to start.

Stuart claimed in its 2018 lawsuit that the company made or sold firefighti­ng foams containing PFAS that polluted local soil and groundwate­r, and sought more than $100m for filtration and remediatio­n. It was one of more than 4,000 lawsuits filed against 3M and other chemical companies.

Dubbed “forever chemicals” as they do not easily break down in the human body or environmen­t, PFAS are used in a wide range of products, from nonstick cookware to cosmetics, and have been linked to cancer, hormonal dysfunctio­n and environmen­tal damage.

The US Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) has called PFAS an “urgent public health and environmen­tal issue”.

The EPA has taken several steps in recent years to tighten regulation­s for the chemicals, and in March announced the first-ever national drinking water standards for six of the chemicals.

3M in December set a 2025 deadline to stop producing PFAS.

Three other major chemicals companies – Chemours Co, DuPont de Nemours Inc and Corteva Inc – announced earlier this month that they had reached an agreement in principle for $1.19bn to settle claims they contaminat­ed US public water systems with PFAS.

3M still faces PFAS-related lawsuits filed by individual­s with personal injury and property damage claims, as well as by US states over damages to natural resources such as rivers and lakes that were not part of the settlement.

 ?? 3M did not admit liability when reaching the settlement. Photograph: Nicholas Pfosi/Reuters ??
3M did not admit liability when reaching the settlement. Photograph: Nicholas Pfosi/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States