Documents show 3M knew of dangers of PFAS chemicals, activist group says
By Jim Spencer | Star Tribune | August 28, 2019
Read full article by Jim Spencer (Star Tribune)
“WASHINGTON — The Environmental Working Group (EWG) on Wednesday released 20 documents it says are from 3M as part of a timeline that the activist organization says shows the company knew about and hid the dangers of PFAS, a family of chemicals now at the center of a national pollution controversy…
A 1963 study included in the report rated company ‘fluorochemical surfactants’ ‘mildly toxic’ or ‘slightly toxic’ and warned: ‘Due care should be exercised in handling these materials until further information is available on their physiological properties.’
3M had no immediate comment on the report, which contains what the EWG says is company data and memos dating from 1950. The company has denied human health risks in response to public and private lawsuits, though it has collectively paid hundreds of millions of dollars to settled several legal actions without admitting guilt. The company also has said it discontinued use of the most toxic PFAS more than a decade ago and that newly developed substitute PFAS are safe.
For more than half a century, manufacturers such as 3M and DuPont have used per- and polyfluoroakyl substances — or PFAS — to waterproof shoes, stainproof clothes and carpets, make nonstick cookware and as an active ingredient in military firefighting foams…
The Environmental Working Group release comes ahead of scheduled testimony by 3M executives at a Sept. 10 hearing on PFAS by the environment subcommittee of the House Oversight Committee.
‘The long history of corporate deception is important,’ said Scott Faber, EWG’s senior vice president for government affairs. ‘Most legislators are just learning about it.’
In addition to pollution suits, 3M now faces class-action suits by stockholders seeking damages for drops in share prices due to the company’s mishandling of PFAS problems.
More potentially bad news for the Maplewood-based corporation comes in a new peer-reviewed article in Chemical Engineering Journal. In the article, Auburn University researchers determined that new alternative PFAS — so-called ‘short-chain’ versions — ‘are more persistent and mobile’ than older versions that have been deemed toxic…”
This content provided by the PFAS Project.
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