Increasing levels of toxic, synthetic chemicals are being reported in drinking water and reservoirs in Europe and worldwide. One of the most notorious groups of these synthetic chemicals are PFAS. They have also been referred to as “forever chemicals,” as they accumulate in natural environments and do not naturally degrade.
PFAS are only the tip of the iceberg. Several other groups of synthetic, persistent substances are increasingly contaminating water resources. The larger group is called “persistent, mobile and toxic” and “very persistent, very mobile” substances, abbreviated as PMT/vPvM substances.
Many PMT/vPvM substances are challenging for water authorities. Many of them cannot be monitored due to a lack of methods and cannot be removed from the activated carbon filters or by ozonation. For several years, the German Environment Agency (UBA) has sought to address this hazard from PMT/vPvM substances.
Many recent policy actions have been happening in Europe to respond to this increasing contamination. In Europe, plans are underway to implement a broad restriction for all PFAS. In April, PMT/vPvM substances were officially labelled as a new type of hazardous substance in Europe by introducing PMT/vPM hazard categories in regulating Chemicals, Labeling and Packaging.
Reporting on long-term pollution
To provide further guidance on avoiding and managing PFAS and PMT/vPvM substances, UBA has commissioned the Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI) to prepare four new reports, all released simultaneously. Each report focuses on different aspects.
The first report is an update of a guidance document to assess if a chemical substance would meet the PMT/vPvM criteria. The second report presents a literature review of synthetic substances detected in water. This included in drinking water, wastewater, and groundwater, and discusses how many PMT/vPvM substances there are. The third report lists 343 PMT/vPvM substances for action. Finally, the fourth report presents a strategy for prioritizing which PMT/vPvM substances deserve the most attention and also includes surveys and an environmental monitoring campaign regarding these substances.
UBA President Dirk Messner considers that the chemical industry has to minimize emissions of these PMT/vPvM substances. “The sustainable protection of our drinking water resources and human health must have priority in this context. Because once drinking water resources are polluted with persistent chemicals, this will be almost impossible to remediate, or will require immense effort and expense.”
Furthermore, an extensive literature search shows that more than 600 chemicals have already been detected in our water resources. Around half of the chemicals detected fall under the European chemicals regulation REACH. Many of these are PMT/vPvM substances.
Future research into long-term pollution needed
Dr Christiane Rohleder, State Secretary at the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety, said, “These results are extremely important and show that this class of substances is a relevant issue for our water resources. I, therefore, call on the industry to take the necessary measures on its own initiative and as a precaution to avoid further entry of these substances into the environment as far as possible.”
The lead author of all four reports, Hans Peter Arp an expert advisor at NGI. He says, “There are many questions and concerns about how to best tackle the threat of PFAS and PMT/vPvM substances. We hope that these four reports should help society tackling this issue. We particularly hope these reports will help pave the way for officially including PMT/vPvM hazard criteria in the upcoming revision to Europe’s chemical regulation, REACH.”
Arp also sees these reports as having international relevance beyond Europe. “Europe is starting an initiative to introduce the PMT/vPvM hazard criteria to be recognized by the United Nations. These reports could also facilitate this recognition. If successful, this would help develop a global strategy for reducing this intergenerational, chemical threat to water security and quality.”
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