Kaye Spector, EcoWatch
Waking Times
Traces of 18 unregulated chemicals were found in drinking water from more than one-third of U.S. water utilities in a nationwide sampling, according to new, unpublished research by federal scientists.
Included are 11 perfluorinated compounds, an herbicide, two solvents,
caffeine, an antibacterial compound, a metal and an antidepressant,
reports Environmental Health News.
While studies increasingly report newly emerging contaminants in
wastewater, there has been little data on which ones are in drinking
water. Researchers from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) analyzed single samples of
untreated and treated water from 25 U.S. utilities that voluntarily
participated in the project.
Twenty-one contaminants were detected—mostly in low concentrations of
parts per trillion—in treated drinking water from at least nine of the
utilities. Eighteen of the chemicals are not regulated under the federal
Safe Drinking Water Act so utilities do not have to meet any limit or
even monitor for them.
“The good news is the concentrations are generally pretty low,” said
Dana Kolpin, a research hydrologist with the USGS who participated in
the study. “But there’s still the unknown. Are there long-term
consequences of low-level exposure to these chemicals?”
For many of the contaminants, little is known about potential human
health effects of low doses. But one of the perfluorinated compounds,
known as PFOA, has been linked to
a variety of health problems, including cancer, among people in
communities where water is contaminated by a chemical plant in West
Virginia.
Of 251 chemicals, bacteria, viruses and microbes the scientists
measured, 117 were not detected in any of the treated drinking water.
Twenty-one were found in water from more than one-third of the 25
utilities (nine or more) and 113 were found in less than one-third
(eight or fewer).
Four of the chemicals found in the samples—the metal strontium, the herbicide metolachlor, PFOS and PFOA—are on the EPA’s list of chemicals under consideration for
drinking water standards. The EPA plans to make decisions regarding at
least five of the contaminants on its list next year.
“We’re hoping through this work the EPA will do a much more intensive
contaminant candidate list and develop new methods and requirements for
drinking water plants,” said Edward Furlong, a scientist with the USGS
who participated in the study.
Perfluorinated
chemicals, which were found most frequently, are widely used in a
variety of industrial processes, including manufacture of some nonstick and stain-resistant food packaging, fabrics and cookware.
The two most common perfluorinated compounds, PFOS and PFOA, in the
utilities’ water have been detected in the blood of nearly all people in
the U.S.
A panel of scientists has concluded there
is a “probable link” between PFOA in drinking water and high
cholesterol, ulcerative colitis, thyroid disease, testicular cancer,
kidney cancer and pregnancy-induced hypertension. The findings were
based on people in Mid-Ohio Valley communities whose water was polluted
with PFOA from a DuPont plant.
PFOS, used in Scotchgard until 3M phased it out in 2002, has been linked to attention disorders in children and thyroid disease in men.
The EPA has classified metolachlor as a possible human carcinogen based on studies of highly exposed rats.
Strontium can affect bone growth, according to some animal studies that
used doses much higher than those found in drinking water.
The perfluorinated compounds were at similar concentrations in the
untreated and treated drinking water, suggesting that treatment
techniques are largely unsuccessful. Only one plant was successful at
removing them and it used activated carbon treatment.
Activated carbon, ozone and UV treatments are generally better at
removal than traditional chlorine treatment, but such techniques are
often prohibitively expensive, said EPA research chemist Susan
Glassmeyer, who led the project.
“People resent having to pay anything for water,” she said. “There’s
the thought that there’s a God-given right to have as much as we want
but, if you want the cleanest water, these techniques take money.”
Treatment also can sometimes transform compounds into new ones, said
Laurel Schaider, a research associate at the Harvard School of Public
Health.
“Chlorination and other treatments technologies will remove some
contaminants, but will react with others,” Schaider said. “Some
compounds may appear to be removed but may be transformed to a chemical
we know even less about.”
Glassmeyer said the utilities, which remain anonymous, represented a
mix of large and small and used different water treatment technologies.
Preliminary findings of the study, which is expected to be published
next year, were presented by the scientists at a toxicology conference
in Nashville last month.
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