Flame-Retardant Chemical Could Prove as Serious a Pollutant as PCBs or DDT
By Matt Crenson The Associated Press
Published: Jan 29, 2002
A chemical flame retardant commonly used in foam furniture padding is 
accumulating so rapidly in the breast milk of nursing mothers that 
environmentalists and some scientists are calling for a ban on it.
Little is known about the toxic nature of polybrominated diphenyl ether, 
commonly known by the acronym PBDE. Early studies show it poses some of the 
same dangers as PCBs and DDT. Those two chemicals were banned in the United 
States decades ago for their myriad detrimental effects on animal and human 
health.
Environmentalists advocate a ban on PBDE as well. One form of the chemical 
will be banned next year in Europe, where the law requires proof of safety 
before a new agent can be used in the environment. U.S. law requires proof 
of harm or risk before a chemical is banned.
But the chemical industry argues that more research is needed before 
banning something that protects lives. Producers of PBDE say there is no 
evidence that it will ever reach harmful levels, while its benefits as a 
flame retardant are well-known.
Adding PBDE to foam furniture padding, television casings and other 
plastics reduces by 45 percent the risk of death and injury due to fire, 
the chemical manufacturers say.
"We're not talking about aesthetics. People use brominated flame retardants 
because they save lives," said Robert Campbell, a spokesman for Great Lakes 
Chemical Corp. in West Lafayette, Ind.
Like PCBs and DDT, PBDE is a persistent organic pollutant, or POP. POPs can 
remain in the environment for years without breaking down. Some of these 
pollutants have such an affinity for fat that they build up in the bodies 
of both animals and humans from before birth until death.
"It seems that PBDEs are an important - but generally unrecognized - 
persistent organic pollutant in the United States," Robert C. Hale, a 
professor at the Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences, and five colleagues 
wrote in the journal Nature a few months ago.
Persistent organic pollutants are so difficult to purge from the 
environment that 25 years after being banned, trace amounts of PCBs can 
still be measured in human blood. Waterways such as New York's Hudson River 
and Wisconsin's Fox River are being dredged at costs running into the 
hundreds of millions to rid them of PCB contamination. In many waters, 
anglers are warned not to eat the fish they catch or to limit their 
consumption to one or two servings a month.
"There is an enormous need to act quickly when there is a problem with a 
chemical that is not only toxic but is persistent and accumulates, because 
it will continue to get worse before it gets better," said physician Gina 
Solomon, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Industry uses several forms of PBDE to decrease the flammability of various 
plastics. Only one of those types - used mostly in polyurethane foam 
furniture padding - has been found in the environment and breast milk. 
According to Environmental Protection Agency records, Great Lakes Chemical 
is the only U.S. manufacturer of that form of PBDE.
"At this point all bets are open in terms of how it's getting into the 
environment," said Hale, who stops short of calling for a ban on the 
pollutant, which was developed in the 1960s.
He has hypothesized that discarded furniture is a major source of PBDE in 
the environment. Whenever anybody tosses out an old sofa, he explained, 
nature goes to work. Water and sunlight break the foam into crumbling 
pieces that eventually are ground to dust. Insects have also been observed 
munching away at the material. From those humble beginnings the chemical 
travels all the way up the food chain to humans.
Hale has found PBDEs virtually everywhere he has looked: In a small river 
along the North Carolina-Virginia border, he found fish with the highest 
levels of PBDE ever recorded in an animal. He has also collected sewage 
sludge samples from four states, all with high concentrations of PBDE.
Swedish scientists first documented the increase of PBDE in humans. For 30 
years, Sweden has sampled the breast milk of nursing mothers to track 
exposure to dioxin, PCBs and other pollutants that accumulate in body fat. 
The United States has no similar program.
In 1998, Swedish scientists reported that levels of PBDE in breast milk had 
increased 40-fold since 1972.
Since the Swedish discovery, the chemical has been found in Swedish pike, 
Virginia catfish and North Sea cod. Seals, moose and reindeer all carry 
PBDE in their body fat and like humans, transmit it to their nursing young. 
PBDE has even been found in the blubber of sperm whales in the Arctic Ocean.
Even more alarming to environmentalists was the revelation in December by 
the journal Environmental Science & Technology that North American mothers 
have breast-milk PBDE levels at least 40 times the highest concentrations 
found in Sweden.
"It's humongously high," said Mehran Alaee, a Canadian government scientist 
who compiled the North American data. "If you let it go like this, it will 
reach a point sooner or later that it will cause some damage to the 
environment."
Where that point lies, nobody knows. Researchers simply have not collected 
the information they need to determine how much PBDE is harmful.
"What we have seen in our developmental neurotoxicity studies ... is that 
PBDEs can be as toxic as the PCBs," said Per Eriksson, a toxicologist at 
Uppsala University in Sweden.
Eriksson's experiments have shown that one large dose of PBDE delivered 
early in a mouse's life can cause permanent brain damage.
Similar experiments by Per Ola Darnerud of Sweden's National Food 
Administration have determined that in mice, the smallest dose of PBDE that 
can cause observable health effects is about 1 million times greater than 
current human exposures.
But those experiments both involve relatively large amounts of PBDE given 
to animals over a short time. Nobody really knows how lower doses delivered 
over decades will affect humans.
"I'm hoping that within two to three years we'll have an answer," said 
Kevin Crofton, a toxicologist with EPA's National Health and Environmental 
Effects Research Laboratory.
Faced with similar uncertainty in May 2000, the 3M Co. chose to remove 
another POP, known as PFOS, from Scotchgard and several other products. 
Like PBDE, PFOS had been found to persist in the environment, but little is 
known about its toxic effects.
Users of PBDE could do the same, substituting another flame-retardant 
chemical in its place. But PBDE has properties other flame retardants 
don't, Campbell said. It does not discolor foam or decrease its durability 
as much as other flame retardants do. And though all flame retardants 
evaporate into room air in trace amounts, PBDE does so at lower levels 
compared to many alternatives.
For that reason, Great Lakes Chemical has chosen to continue producing its 
PBDE products for the time being.
"If things turn out that the levels that are going to get into the 
environment are problematic, we'll do the right thing," Campbell said.
In Europe, environmental authorities have already decided that PBDE 
warrants action. Beginning next year, the PBDE variety that has shown up in 
breast milk is banned.

AP-ES-01-29-02 1522EST

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