At a virtual press briefing Thursday, the advocacy organization said it was hopeful that the EPA’s forthcoming plan would include major steps, such as setting standards for drinking water and groundwater cleanup; restricting industrial discharges of PFAS into air and water; designating the chemicals as hazardous under law, which would kickstart the cleanup process, especially at contaminated Department of Defense sites (nearly 400 installations are contaminated with PFAS); ending unnecessary use of PFAS, especially in firefighting foam and household products; and ensuring proper disposal of PFAS waste.
“Communities have waited more than 20 years for EPA to act,” said Environmental Working Group’s Scott Faber. “EPA first became aware of the risks posed by PFAS at least as early as 1998. And that’s why we’re so excited to finally see a roadmap that treats this emergency like an emergency.”
Yet the group also has some concerns that the EPA won’t be as proactive as it could be, noting that many industrial dischargers of PFAS were not included in the agency’s latest plan, released Sept. 8, to address industrial discharges under the Clean Water Act.
The plan, Preliminary Effluent Guidelines Program Plan 15, identifies opportunities to protect public health and the environment through regulation of wastewater pollution. The agency determined that revised effluent limitations guidelines and pretreatment standards are warranted for organic chemicals, plastics, and synthetic fibers to address PFAS discharges from facilities manufacturing PFAS; metal finishing, to address PFAS discharges from chromium electroplating facilities; and meat and poultry products to address nutrient discharges from those companies.
“That plan would leave thousands of companies that could be discharging PFAS, like paper mills, tanneries, paint companies, electrical component manufacturers, and plastic molders out of the picture,” said Environmental Working Group legislative attorney Melanie Benesh.
The organization estimates that 30,000 companies could be dumping PFAS waste.