Showing 406-420 of 460

  • Aqueous Film-Forming Foams (AFFFs) Are Very Toxic to Aquatic Microcrustaceans

    Science

    18 Nov 2019 | Water, Air, & Soil Pollution

    Seven brands of fire fighting foams were found to be toxic to organisms on the lowest levels of freshwater food chains.

  • Occurrence and source apportionment of perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) in the atmosphere in China

    Science

    12 Nov 2019 | Atmos. Chem. and Phy.

    In a nationwide geographical study researchers found seasonal trends in PFAS concentrations, especially in summer months centering around the Henan province.

  • Biomonitoring of emerging contaminants, perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), in New Jersey adults in 2016–2018

    Science

    5 Nov 2019 | Intern.Journal of Hygi. and Environ. Health

    New Jersey adults had higher PFOA, PFNA, and PFHxS levels compared to other U.S. adults, on average.

  • ‘Forever chemicals’ legacy weighs on Chemours’ future

    News

    4 Nov 2019 | Bloomberg Environment

    Estimates of Chemours’ liabilities related to PFAS, range from the company’s figure of up to $802 million, to one analyst’s calculation of more than $160 billion—more than 15 times the company’s highest-ever market capitalization.

  • [Audio] PFAS chemicals, and you

    News

    1 Nov 2019 | Science Friday

    Science Friday: Conversation with Robert Bilott and Sharon Lerner

  • PFAS solution IN (or OUT) of the NDAA?

    News

    1 Nov 2019 | National Law Review

    Read the full article by Steven Barringer and Katie Reed (National Law Review) “As legislative days dwindle, Congress is in a full sprint to pass the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) (related blog post), among several other must-pass bills. Controversial issues, such as border wall funding, military actions related to Iran, PFAS, among others, have bedeviled congressional…

  • Mark Ruffalo, Todd Haynes talk ‘Dark Waters’: ‘Our environmental future is at stake’

    News

    29 Oct 2019 | Variety

    “It is the truth,” Bilott said, assessing how accurate he feels the film is. “They did an amazing job condensing [20 years] into two hours. I was a little skeptical at first…about whether I should do something like this, but it was clear that [Mark] was doing it for the right reason: to bring the story out, to do it accurately and [he] wanted to show what really happened.”

  • Top U.S. toxicologist was barred from saying PFAS cause disease in humans. She’s saying it now

    News

    24 Oct 2019 | The Intercept

    “I was banned from doing it,” said Birnbaum. “I had to use ‘association’ all the time. If I was talking about human data or impacts on people, I had to always say there was an association with a laundry list of effects.”

  • PFAS exposure may increase risk of breast cancer

    News

    24 Oct 2019 | EWG News

    To reduce the risk of breast cancer and other health impacts from PFAS, Congress should include in the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2020 provisions that would quickly phase out the use of PFAS in military firefighting foam, reduce industrial discharges of PFAS, require reporting and monitoring for PFAS in ground and surface water, and jump-start the cleanup process under Superfund.

  • Shapiro: ‘Legal action’ coming for companies tied to PFAS drinking water contamination

    News

    23 Oct 2019 | The Intelligencer

    Attorney General Josh Shapiro says his office will file legal action in the coming months against companies that made firefighting foams. Chemicals found in the foams have contaminated Bucks and Montgomery County communities.

  • 10 toxic ‘forever chemicals’ found in Louisville, KY, tap water

    News

    22 Oct 2019 | EWG News

    The highest level of any single PFAS detected in the EWG sample collected in Louisville was 22 ppt of a compound known as GenX. It is a replacement chemical for PFOA, which was used to make Teflon before U.S. manufacturers phased it out of production under pressure from the EPA. The EPA’s research has found that GenX is nearly as toxic as the PFOA it replaced, and DuPont, its original manufacturer, has provided test results to the EPA showing that GenX caused cancer in lab animals.

  • ‘Dark Waters’ brings awareness to PFAS water contamination litigation

    News

    15 Oct 2019 | Legal Examiner

    A new movie scheduled to be released in November 2019, follows the story of how the American company DuPont knowingly poisoned 70,000 residents for decades. Currently, lawsuit against DuPont, 3M, and other companies are being filled for their alleged role in other water contamination crisis.

  • For PFAS, hazardous designation is not a ban

    News

    15 Oct 2019 | EWG News

    Designating PFAS as “hazardous substances” is critical to cleaning up legacy contamination [and is different than a ban]. There are currently 761 substances on the CERCLA hazardous substances list. Almost 700 of them have been on the list since the law was passed in 1980. An EWG analysis found that at least 599, or 79 percent of these chemicals are likely still in active use in commerce today. What’s more, 339 of the CERCLA hazardous substances chemicals, or 44 percent, are not only in production, but likely produced at high volumes.

  • Governor DeWine issues order to analyze PFAS in Ohio’s drinking water

    News

    15 Oct 2019 | JD Supra

    Ohio EPA and ODH have been directed to develop an “action plan” by December 1, 2019, with the focus of testing public and private water systems. The governor’s order specifically notes that water supplies “near known sources of PFAS, such as firefighting training sites and manufacturing facilities” are to be analyzed.

  • The PFOA substitute GenX detected in the environment near a fluoropolymer manufacturing plant in the Netherlands

    Science

    14 Oct 2019 | Chemosphere

    GenX and PFOA also detected in drinking water samples radiating from a manufacturing facility.