Alarming levels of PFAS in Norwegian Arctic ice pose new risk to wildlife

By Tom Perkins | The Guardian | February 11, 2023

Read the full article by Tom Perkins (The Guardian)

"Norwegian Arctic ice is contaminated with alarming levels of toxic PFAS, and the chemicals may represent a major environmental stressor to the region’s wildlife, new research finds.

The Oxford University-led study’s measurements of ice around Svalbard, Norway, detected 26 types of PFAS compounds, and found when ice melts, the chemicals can move from glaciers into downstream ecosystems like Arctic fjords and tundra.

The meltwater can contain a cocktail of contaminants that includes PFAS and affects the entire food web, including plankton, fish, seal and apex animals like polar bears, which have previously been found to have high PFAS levels in their blood."

This content provided by the PFAS Project.

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