ARTICLE
4 November 2021

As The PFAS Panic Continues, EPA Tries To Keep Up With The States

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a general practice, full-service Am Law 100 law firm with more than 600 attorneys. We are headquartered in Boston and have additional US offices in Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, San Diego, San Francisco, and Washington, DC, as well as an office in Toronto, Canada.
EPA has released its risk assessment for GenX, one of the hundreds of "forever chemicals" known collectively as PFAS that are ubiquitous in our environment owing to decades of use in everything from fire suppressants to pizza boxes.
United States Environment

EPA has released its risk assessment for GenX, one of the hundreds of "forever chemicals" known collectively as PFAS that are ubiquitous in our environment owing to decades of use in everything from fire suppressants to pizza boxes.  Experts have concluded that if the same principles were used to assess the risk associated with other PFAS that were used to finally assess the risk associated with GenX, the predicted safe levels of those other PFAS would be much lower.

In the risk assessment, EPA more than halved what it considers a safe "dose" of GenX.  EPA did that under pressure from certain States to increase the effect on its risk assessment of what are known as "uncertainty factors".  To over simplify things, "uncertainty factors" magnify calculated risk to account for what one doesn't know about the toxicity of a chemical.  Ultimately those "uncertainty factors" may prove to have been far too conservative but, if past is prologue, by the time that is known, no one will be listening.

EPA finds itself in a bit of a jam.  The more it suggests that the risks associated with PFAS may be greater than it previously calculated, the more it faces increased pressure to immediately eliminate those risks.  And, as we know from the PFAS Roadmap released last month, it is going to take at least several months to begin to make the changes to federal regulations necessary to do that under federal law.    On the other hand, if EPA doesn't appear to be keeping up with the States that have already set and are setting much lower "safe" limits for PFAS, EPA might be criticized for not doing its job.

For now the States that have already regulated PFAS will continue to drive behavior in the regulated community and panic over PFAS will likely continue to increase.

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