Health & Fitness
‘Forever Chemicals’ In Florida Water: New Research Offers Hope
A new law requires the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to set state rules for target cleanup levels of PFAS.
FLORIDA — Scientists think they’ve come up with a way to break down “forever chemicals” — a class of chemicals found in Florida’s and water systems nationwide that are associated with low birth weight, thyroid disease, certain types of cancers and other serious health issues.
In June, the Environmental Protection Agency said PFAS are far more dangerous than previously thought, and local utilities should install filters to remove them or at least tell customers how dangerous they are.
U.S. manufacturers have phased out PFAS and PFOS, once an attractive choice for packaging and other products because they don’t react with other molecules and repel stains, grease and water. A few uses remain, and they’re ubiquitous in the environment, having accumulated since the 1940s.
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According to WUSF, House Bill 1475 and Senate Bill 7012 now legally require the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to set state rules for target cleanup levels of PFAS. Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the bill into law on June 20, which immediately took effect.
On its website, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection said it is committed to the protection of the groundwater resources of the state and the public health and safety of our residents.
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As part of these efforts, the Division of Waste Management (DWM) has begun investigations to determine potential sources and environmental impacts related to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).
A map compiled by the Environmental Working Group found that more than a dozen Florida cities and military sites at risk for PFAS.
Related: EPA Issues New Drinking Water Health Advisories: See Florida Impacts
Northwestern University researchers said in a study published this month in Science that the forever chemicals were destroyed when boiled in a solution of water, sodium hydroxide (lye) and dimethyl sulfoxide (a chemical solvent approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat chronic bladder inflammation).
Chemicals started breaking down into harmless byproducts within hours. Within days, they were gone completely. The method isn’t perfect. Not all PFAS were destroyed but the research could lead to cheap approaches to remove the forever chemicals that put millions of Americans at risk for cancer and other diseases, Science reported.
Tasha Stoiber, an environmental chemist at the Environmental Working Group, a U.S.-based nonprofit that closely tracks the issue, told Science the research is “encouraging and promising.”
Stoiber said current approaches are both expensive and ineffective. Filtering systems can help, but the residue can still end up in the landfill and leach into groundwater, and incineration at super-high temperatures above 1,832 degrees Fahrenheit (1,000 degrees Celsius) consumes vast amounts of energy and cost millions of dollars, she said.
"The current way that people will try to dispose of firefighting foams that contain PFAS is to incinerate them, but there has been evidence that these incinerators are actually just blowing the PFAS around the community in which the incinerator is located,” Brittany Trang, an environmental chemist at Evanston, Illinois–based Northwestern University and one of the lead authors of the study, said in a conference call with reporters, NBC News reported.
“So there’s a need for a method to get rid of PFAS in a way that does not continue to pollute,” she said.
“This is the first time I’ve seen a degradation mechanism where I thought, ‘this could actually make a difference,’” Shira Joudan, an environmental chemist at York University in Toronto, Canada, who wasn’t involved in the study, told Nature News.
At least 3,000 PFAS-contaminated sites have been identified nationwide, and studies show them to be toxic even in minute quantities, according to Science. The National Institutes of Health estimates PFAS can be found in the bloodstreams of 97 percent of Americans.
“We’ve really polluted the whole world with this stuff,” Northwestern chemist William Dichtel, the co-author of the study, told The New York Times.
The research isn’t a “silver bullet” and will take some time to scale for widespread use, according to Chris Sales, an environmental engineer at Philadelphia’s Drexel University who wasn’t involved in the study, NBC reported.
“The big question is whether or not this process could be scaled up,” Sales said.
Melanie Benesh, legislative attorney for the EWG, told The Washington Post the EPA’s advisory earlier this summer “should set off alarm bells for consumers and regulators.”
“These proposed advisory levels demonstrate that we must move much faster to dramatically reduce exposures to these toxic chemicals,” Benesh said.
Even at levels so low they can’t be detected in drinking water, these compounds pose a health risk, the EPA said in the revised advisory. The agency lowered the allowable limits of these two compounds, immediately drawing fire from the chemical industry
The American Chemical Council, which represents PFAS producers such as 3M and Dupont, said Wednesday the EPA’s new standards “will have sweeping implications” on public policy, and “cannot be achieved with existing treatment technology and, in fact, are below levels that can be reliably detected using existing EPA methods.”
Further, the industry group questioned the science behind the revised drinking water health advisory, saying it should have been delayed until the agency’s own Science Advisory Board could review dramatically reduced toxicity levels that are “3,000 to 17,000 times lower” than those set in 2016.
“Getting the science right is of critical importance,” the American Chemical Council said in a statement.
Health advocates say the problem can’t be overstated. Forever chemicals have already prompted officials in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan to issue advisories against eating certain fish caught in Lake Superior.
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