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http://www.alternet.org/story/46061/

Toxic Teflon: Compounds from Household Products Found in Human Blood
By Stan Cox, AlterNet
Posted on January 2, 2007

"Better things for better living -- through chemistry." From the 1940s to
the 1980s, E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co. wooed customers with that
slogan, one of the most memorable in American advertising. But today, two
groups of DuPont products developed during that era -- fluorotelomers and
fluoropolymers -- are showing how chemical-dependent "better living" can
come at a high price.

DuPont and other companies use those synthetic compounds to make an
extraordinarily wide range of products, including nonstick cookware (e.g,
Teflon), grease-resistant food packaging (e.g., microwave popcorn and
pizza boxes), stain-resistant fabrics and carpets (e.g., Stainmaster),
shampoos, conditioners, cleaning products, electronic components, paints,
firefighting foams, and a host of other artifacts of modern life.

But like many "better things" produced by industrial chemistry, these
products can have disastrous side effects. The chemicals used to make them
or that are released when they decompose are especially troublesome. They
can easily escape to roam freely around the planet, persist in the
environment, contaminate the blood of people and wildlife, change body
chemistry, and are accused of causing health problems, including cancer.

Supermolecules

After decades of harnessing the almost miraculous properties of
fluorotelomers and fluoropolymers, scientists are now showing that
compounds that are used in their manufacture or thrown off when they break
down -- fellow members of the perfluorochemical (PFC) family -- are
turning up in people and animals all over the planet.

Although DuPont has never conceded that PFCs might cause health or
environmental problems, the company has bowed to relentless and rising
public pressure in recent years and moved to rein in its emissions. But
whatever action is taken at this point, a class of molecules that did not
exist on the planet before the 20th century is now here to stay.

Chemical properties that make PFCs so useful in industry also make them
virtually indestructible in nature. For sheer persistence, two members of
the family, perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate
(PFOS), stand out. They are not broken down by heat, light, or microbes.
Other PFCs do break down, but in doing so, most of them end up giving off
PFOA or PFOS.

Of these two compounds' many disturbing properties, the one setting off
the most alarm bells is their potential for causing cancer. Studies
reported by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) (some of them
conducted in the labs of Du Pont and a former producer, the 3M Company)
have shown that rats fed PFOA were more likely to develop tumors in the
pancreas, liver, testicles, and mammary glands. PFOS has been linked to
liver and thyroid cancer in rats. A 1993 study found that 3M workers
involved in manufacturing PFOA were three times as likely to die of
prostate cancer as those who weren't (the difference was statistically
significant, but because of the small number of deaths overall, the
researchers warn that "results must be interpreted catiously.") Two of
3M's own studies also showed increased, but statistically nonsignificant,
increases in prostate-cancer causing problems among PFOA workers. An
EPA-appointed science advisory board has recommended labeling PFOA as
"likely to be carcinogenic" in humans. DuPont has responded by maintaining
that the "weight of evidence suggests that PFOA exposure does not cause
cancer in humans," not exactly the kind of seal of approval you'd want to
bet your family's health on.

In addition to developing cancers, rats and other laboratory animals fed
varying amounts of PFOA have shown significantly increased rates of
miscarriage, weight loss, and thyroid problems. Offspring of females fed
the chemical had delayed growth but extra-fast sexual maturation. PFOS has
caused a range of diseases in lab animals and shown a strong tendency to
concentrate in humans and the wildlife food chain, prompting 3M to phase
that chemical out of its big-selling Scotchgard fabric protector and other
products in 2000-2002.

PFCs have turned up in wildlife on at least three continents and above the
Arctic Circle, in the blood of dolphins, seals, sea lions, minks, polar
bears, gulls, albatrosses, bald eagles, sea turtles, and dozens more
species. They are widespread in seafood. Fifteen PFCs have been identified
in human blood samples, with highest concentrations in Americans. PFOA has
been found in the blood of 90 percent to 95 percent of U.S. residents who
have been screened. Once in the body, it doesn't leave quickly; almost
four years after being taken in, half of the original amount remains.

DuPont officials point out that no statistically significant relationships
between PFOA exposure and disease or mortality have been seen in humans.
But the Environmental Working Group (EWG) argues that all employee-health
studies carried out by 3M and DuPont had flaws in their experimental
designs that tended to make it harder to show that effects of PFCs were
statistically significant.

Cases of pet birds dropping dead and humans developing flu-like symptoms
in the presence of overheated nonstick cookware have raised concerns that
Teflon might be releasing toxic PFCs. Industry officials dispute that.

Arguing on somewhat unconventional grounds, a vice president of the
Cookware Manufacturers Association told a Columbia News Service reporter,
"There's no evidence of safety concern whatsoever with using nonstick
pans, and sales figures prove that."

PFOA is used as a processing aid in the manufacture of Teflon, but is not
part of the final product. Most evidence indicates that emissions of PFCs
during manufacturing and their release from food packaging, fabric
treatment, and other products are indeed more important sources of local
and global contamination than are the Teflon-coated pots and pans in your
kitchen.

Scientists have observed a general buildup of PFCs in the biosphere, but
very little is known about what that will mean for ecosystems. PFCs
apparently do not have the extreme toxicity of, say, dioxins;
nevertheless, there's little reason for complacency when compounds that
can be found so readily in such a broad range of animals -- mammals,
birds, and reptiles -- have also been shown to damage the health of the
few species on which they have been tested.

Turning up the heat on DuPont

Since 2000, the federal government, environmental groups, and private
citizens have been steadily turning up the heat on DuPont with a series of
lawsuits and proposed regulatory actions in states across the nation:


The 2004 settlement of a class-action lawsuit brought by Ohio and West
Virginia residents living in the vicinity of DuPont's Washington Works
plant required the company to spend more than $100 million to ensure that
homes in the area are supplied with water uncontaminated with PFOA.


That settlement also led to initiation of a court-ordered C-8 Health
Project, a five-year study correlating PFOA blood-serum levels in more
than 60,000 area residents with the incidence of nine types of medical
conditions, starting with cancer, heart disease and birth defects.


A court-appointed Science Panel of three prominent epidemiologists
assigned to analyze and interpret the C-8 Health Project data requested
permission this fall to study the effects of PFOA on nearly 5,000
Washington Works employees, many of whom have extremely high blood PFOA
levels. DuPont is fighting to keep its employees out of the study,
claiming that its own surveys of its workers have demonstrated that there
are no health risks.


The EPA sued DuPont in 2004, charging that the company had for years been
concealing information on PFOA pollution at Washington Works. A year ago,
without admitting any wrongdoing, DuPont agreed to pay $16.5 million in
fines and support of research and education -- the largest civil judgment
EPA had ever obtained.


Since 2003, mostly small amounts of PFOA have been detected in groundwater
and going into the Cape Fear River near DuPont's Fayetteville Works plant
in North Carolina. Then, in 2005, water in a well close to the plant
showed an extremely high level of 765 parts per billion (ppb). DuPont
began producing a salt of PFOA at Fayetteville in 2002, when 3M, its
former supplier, halted manufacture of the chemical at a plant in
Minnesota in response to public pressure.


Last January, a Scientific Advisory Board appointed by the EPA to review
the agency's risk assessment of PFOA voted, by a 12-4 majority, to
recommend labeling PFOA as "likely to be carcinogenic" in humans, based on
animal studies. DuPont disputes the designation, and EPA has not included
it in its as-yet unfinished assessment.


In April, residents of the area around DuPont's Chamber Works plant in
Salem Co., New Jersey, filed a lawsuit claiming that the plant had
contaminated their water supply with PFCs and that the company had known
for years that it was doing so.


Around the same time, class-action cases against DuPont in 12 states were
consolidated as one big case in federal court in Iowa, alleging that the
company did not inform consumers that it knew Teflon can emit harmful
fumes when overheated.


In a Nov. 20 consent order, EPA forced DuPont to agree that if the water
supply of any household near Washington Works showed a PFOA concentration
above 0.5 ppb, the company would pay to provide water treatment or an
alternative water supply. The agreement was prompted by findings that
people living near the plant had very high blood concentrations of PFOA,
60 times the national average.


Also in November, a committee of California's Office of Environmental
Health Hazard Assessment met to consider making PFOA a top-priority
chemical for review as a possible carcinogen under state's Safe Drinking
Water and Toxic Enforcement Act. The committee is currently divided on the
issue, but if the agency decides to designate PFOA as cancer-causing, any
product containing the chemical will have to be so labeled. To have their
products carry that stigma in a state the size of California would no
doubt mean heavy financial losses to DuPont and other companies.


Stewardship, not elimination

In early 2006, DuPont and seven other companies signed on to a voluntary
"PFOA Stewardship Program" under which they pledged to reduce emissions of
PFOA from their factories by 95 percent by the year 2010. They will also
achieve a 95 percent reduction in PFOA contamination of their products by
2010 and eliminate the chemical from products and emissions by 2015.

Reacting to the agreement, Ken Cook, president of EWG, told the Washington
Post, "As harshly as we have singled out DuPont for criticism for its past
handling of PFOA pollution, today we want to single out and commend the
company and acknowledge its leadership going forward."

In an Oct. 31 letter to the EPA, DuPont administrators claimed already to
have slashed both their U.S. factory emissions and the PFOA content of
their products by 97 percent since 2000. Fluoropolymer products going into
automotive, military and medical products will take somewhat longer to
convert to low PFOA content, wrote DuPont, "due to their criticality."

Nevertheless, some environmental organizations and scientists are saying
that the Stewardship program is no more than a good first step. For one
thing, it doesn't commit companies to finding substitutes for PFOA in
their processes. DuPont will continue to manufacture PFOA and use it as a
processing aid or reactant in making Teflon and other products.

In April, 27 percent of DuPont's shareholders voted for a resolution
calling on the company to completely phase out the use of PFOA. Sanford
Lewis of DuPont Shareholders for Fair Value announced that despite the
measure's defeat, the vote was significant: "Whenever resolutions on
environmental or toxic chemical issues are filed, if they get more than 10
percent of the vote, we believe it sends a message to management that
shareholders are growing very concerned." He felt that a 27 percent vote
"is so big that it can't be ignored." So far, it has been.

Meanwhile, DuPont will continue producing PFOA and other PFCs, and
globally, several million more pounds of PFCs will be added to the global
pool every year. A portion of that PFC pool will eventually break down to
indestructible PFOA.

So even if PFOA is eliminated from factory emissions and products, it will
continue to spread through the environment unless production of it ceases
and other PFCs are phased out as well. And at least one of DuPont's
efforts to stop PFOA contamination is whipping up controversy.

PFOA heading south

Starting earlier this year, once a day on average, a tanker truck loaded
with a PFC called fluorotelomer alcohol has departed DuPont's Chamber
Works plant in New Jersey en route to its First Chemical plant near
Pascagoula, Miss. There, PFOA contaminant is removed from the
fluorotelomer alcohol and the purified product is hauled back to New
Jersey. A small amount of escaped PFOA, two pounds per year, is expected
to go into the area's sewer system, which ultimately flows into the Gulf
of Mexico.

PFOA is not a regulated substance (all restrictions put on it to date have
resulted from civil settlements, not regulatory actions), so emissions
from the First Chemical plant require no EPA or state Dept. of
Environmental Quality permits. DuPont has said that it will do its own
monitoring and report the results.

Brenda Songy, an area resident and member of the Mississippi Sierra Club,
is not reassured. She's been battling from the beginning to stop the
importation of PFOA from New Jersey. Songy was part of a group that
attended the Pascagoula City Council's October meeting, to urge a ban on
emissions of the chemical into city sewers. They were politely rebuffed.

Songy told me that Pascagoula won't turn away the tanker trucks because
the city and region are "too entrenched in industrialization," despite the
results of past industry-friendliness: a huge load of environmental toxins
and high cancer rates. She said, "At the meeting, our arguments were just
considered a 'girly-wussy' thing, as opposed to the 'manly-market' view
that we should welcome DuPont's investment." (The company is spending $20
million to fit the plant to handle PFOA removal.)

"They aren't bad people," said Songy, referring to the city's leaders.
"They're kind-hearted, and they really believe these companies are also
kind-hearted, that they would never put our lives at risk."

First Chemical plant manager James Freeman told the South Mississippi
Sun-Herald that his plant already had much of the equipment needed to
scrub PFOA from the alcohol. The company is hauling daily loads of
fluorotelomer alcohol more than a thousand miles, he told the paper,
because it would be "impractical and too expensive" to haul the necessary
equipment to New Jersey.

Freeman did not cite the pollution lawsuit currently pending against
DuPont's New Jersey plant as a possible reason that the company is now
hauling PFOA-contaminated product to Mississippi.

A chemical amnesty program

Unlike pharmaceuticals and agricultural chemicals, industrial chemicals
receive only minimal federal scrutiny before being OK'd for use. Upon
passage of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) in the 1970s, more than
63,000 such chemicals -- including PFOA -- were "grandfathered" in,
receiving unrestricted approval for use in industrial processes. Today,
between 80,000 and 100,000 industrial chemicals may be used freely in this
country; since passage of TSCA, only a handful of such chemical compounds
have been placed under restrictions.

A recent series of articles in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram showed just
how loose federal regulation of industrial chemicals is. Under TSCA,
according to the paper, the EPA fields an average of 142 new-chemical
applications each month, and its too-small staff has only 90 days to
review any scientific data bearing on a new chemical's toxicity or
persistence in the environment. There is little or no such information in
most cases anyway, and neither the agency nor the applicant is required to
do any testing before a chemical is approved.

Companies are required to inform the government if they know of any
adverse data, but before any chemical can be rejected, the burden is
placed squarely on EPA to prove that it poses an "unreasonable risk to
health or the environment." How high must a risk be to be considered
"unreasonable"? That question is left open.

To subject industrial chemicals to the kind of extensive and expensive
testing that drugs and pesticides are required to undergo would surely
cripple industry's ability to turn out new products as fast as they do.
But a system much stricter than the current nonsystem, one that required
environmental studies both before and after a compound is approved, would
force companies to be much more deliberate, and maybe even to ask, "Is
this new product really worth it?" before unleashing yet another new
synthetic molecule on the biosphere.

In July, the federal Government Accountability Office complained about the
innocent-until-proven-guilty attitude that the law takes toward new
industrial chemicals, but no changes appear imminent. Meanwhile,
environmental and health testing will be conducted as it's been done
throughout the age of "better living through chemistry": by exposing
humans, other animals, plants, and microbes to molecules that have never
before existed on Earth, and investigating the consequences only when
they're too dramatic to ignore.

In a product-testing regime like that, the most successful compounds, the
ones that are produced and consumed in the biggest volumes and varieties
of products, get the most thorough testing. But before the results are
even in, some of them -- like PFCs -- can become widespread and
near-permanent residents of the planet. So when DuPont officials make
their regular announcements that PFCs are completely harmless, we can only
hope that they're right.


Stan Cox is a plant breeder and writer in Salina, Kansas.
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