• Optional
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    854 months ago

    Discovered during the Manhattan Project, these ‘waterproof’ chemicals bind to every living thing’s cells with only bad results. 3M knew since the late 70’s and has continued to manufacture enough to contaminate all the freshwater on Earth.

    In April, the EPA took two historic steps to reduce exposure to PFAS. It said that PFOS and PFOA are “likely to cause cancer” and that no level of either chemical is considered safe; it deemed them hazardous substances under the Superfund law, increasing the government’s power to force polluters to clean them up. The agency also set limits for six PFAS in drinking water. In a few years, when the EPA begins enforcing the new regulations, local utilities will be required to test their water and remove any amount of PFOS or PFOA which exceeds four parts per trillion — the equivalent of one drop dissolved in several Olympic swimming pools. 3M has produced enough PFOS and chemicals that degrade into PFOS to exceed this level in all of the freshwater on earth. Meanwhile, many other PFAS continue to be used, and companies are still developing new ones. Thousands of the compounds have been produced; the Department of Defense still depends on many for use in explosives, semiconductors, cleaning fluids and batteries. PFAS can be found in nonstick cookware, guitar strings, dental floss, makeup, hand sanitizer, brake fluid, ski wax, fishing lines and countless other products.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      -534 months ago

      Can we get some numbers on those “likely to cause cancer” claims ?

      It sounds like when the cops get a new toy that can detect drugs with 10x sensitivity and they then start blabbing that everyone is on drugs now.

      Combine that with the science grants system perverse incentives and you’ve got a recipe for making mountains out of mole hills.

  • @WhyDoYouPersist
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    494 months ago

    Recently, 3M settled the lawsuit filed by cities and towns with polluted water. It will pay up to $12.5 billion to cover the costs of filtering out PFAS, depending on how many water systems need the chemicals removed. The settlement, however, doesn’t approach the scale of the problem. At least 45% of U.S. tap water is estimated to contain one or more forever chemicals, and one drinking water expert told me that the cost of removing them all would likely reach $100 billion.

    $100 billion? Seems low. That’s only five renovations to JFK.

    • @piecat
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      174 months ago

      100 billion wouldn’t even cover the firefighting foam pfas cleanup at jfk

  • Optional
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    444 months ago

    An amazing article. You really should take the time to read it.

    • @WhyDoYouPersist
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      124 months ago

      Thanks for the push, well worth it. Solid investigative journalism. The Jim Johnson section did make my blood pressure rise, let’s be honest though: it’s probably just my PFAS.

      • Optional
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        34 months ago

        No, I’m with you, that was very much Situation Normal All excuse-me??

    • @Clanket
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      94 months ago

      Thanks, I was about to skip it. Brilliant article, and thank you to that woman for helping bring this to everyone’s attention. It’s unbelievable what some people are willing to do to make money. Fuck them, and anyone else that facilitates it by hiding secrets like this.

      • Optional
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        14 months ago

        I was really um . . . let’s say amazed . . by the CEO’s reaction to her presentation. Very . . . yeah.

  • @unreasonabro
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    154 months ago

    All secrecy is stealing, all corporations are criminal

  • UltraMagnus0001
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    64 months ago

    Dark Waters is a good movie about forever chemicals