Speakers at a North Carolina State University symposium examined the problem of PFAS contamination in many state residents’ drinking water.
Researchers, community members, and others gathered Feb. 14 at the NIEHS-funded Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE) at North Carolina State University (NCSU), to discuss the environmental and health impacts in North Carolina of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS.
“North Carolina is the third highest state for PFAS exposure,” said Jamie DeWitt, Ph.D., from East Carolina University. “People who have certain types of PFAS exposure have health effects that include cancers, cholesterol diseases, pregnancy-induced hypertension and preeclampsia, and thyroid disease, among others.”
These man-made chemicals are found in consumer products as varied as nonstick cookware, pizza boxes, and stain repellants. They do not break down, so PFAS can accumulate in the environment over time.
What happened in North Carolina?
The Cape Fear River watershed is the largest watershed in North Carolina, according to Detlef Knappe, Ph.D., from NCSU. “It supplies about 1.5 million people with drinking water, and of that, about 1 million people are affected by wastewater discharges containing high levels of industrial contaminants.” He shared a timeline of the river’s chemical burden.
- 1980 — Fluorochemical production began at DuPont’s Fayetteville Works plant, which merged with Chemours in 2015.
- 2007 — First documentation of a particular PFAS, known as PFOA, in the Cape Fear River, in part due to wastewater discharges from the plant.
- 2009 — In response to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) PFOA Stewardship Program, Chemours began to replace PFOA with a chemical known as GenX.
- 2012 — GenX was first detected, along with other PFAS, in the Cape Fear River.
- 2014 — GenX was first detected in the city of Wilmington’s drinking water.
- 2015 — Sampling was completed for the EPA’s Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR3).
“Based on UCMR3 data, PFAS were detected in 20 public water systems, located in 11 NC counties,” Knappe said, underscoring the extent of contamination.
Liam O’Fallon, director of the NIEHS Partnerships for Environmental Public Health program, noted the extent of the PFAS problem. “While the overall focus has been on exposures south of the Chemours facility, there are very high levels of PFAS in the Deep and Haw rivers, and, to date, no source has been identified,” he said. “Community groups are concerned.”
More than wastewater
Michael Abraczinskas, director of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality’s (DEQ) Division of Air Quality (DAQ), and other researchers have long suspected that PFAS reaches drinking water through routes other than wastewater.
Their research suggested that PFAS emitted into the air falls back to earth in rainwater, which may be how these chemicals are carried to groundwater miles from the source.
The team measured relatively high levels of PFAS in rainwater samples up to 20 miles away from the plant. So DEQ required Chemours to reduce GenX air emissions and provide permanent replacement drinking water supplies for affected residents.
GenX Exposure Study
Jane Hoppin, Sc.D., and Nadine Kotlarz, Ph.D., shared results from the GenX Exposure Study of people in the Lower Cape Fear River basin. Hoppin serves as deputy director of CHHE.
“We did not find GenX in study participant’s blood, suggesting that it has a very short half-life, or breakdown time, but we did find other newly identified PFAS,” said Kotlarz, a postdoctoral researcher in Hoppin’s lab.
The team identified a PFAS known as Hydro-Eve in a majority of the blood samples. “There is no toxicology data on this substance,” Kotlarz said. “We don’t know what this means in terms of health.”
The community weighs in
PFAS researchers know that these are not just scientific questions — people in communities across the state are affected. So symposium organizers included a panel of people working on the frontlines in their communities, including a Riverkeeper from Cape Fear River Watch, an environmental outreach programs manager, and a representative from the New Hanover Health Department.
“It was evident that community groups are very engaged and have important questions the scientists are trying to address,” O’Fallon observed.
The session fostered a dialogue that took the event beyond the typical scientific meeting. “Many participants felt that was the highlight of the symposium,” noted Hoppin.
Birnbaum closes with questions
Birnbaum closed with an overview on the day’s talks and cautioned the audience to consider questions that go beyond research.
“I think we need to begin to ask what’s essential,” she said. “Do our boots and coats really need to be fully waterproof? Do our cooking pans need to be non-stick? And further, why are we making chemicals that won’t break down? I thought we had learned that lesson.”
(Sheena Scruggs, Ph.D., is a digital outreach coordinator in the Office of Communications and Public Liaison.)
The Environmental Factor is produced monthly by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS
*Original article online at https://factor.niehs.nih.gov/2019/3/feature/2-feature-pfas/index.htm