Manufacturers
agree to phase out nonstick chemical |
Complying with a request from the Environmental
Protection Agency, the companies that make perfluorooctanoic
acid (PFOA) have agreed to work toward ending production of
the chemical worldwide by 2015. The agency requested the voluntary
phaseout in late January, days before the majority of the
scientists on one of its advisory boards deemed PFOA a "likely
carcinogen."
All eight manufacturers have also agreed to cut PFOA emissions
and use in commercial products by 95 percent within 5 years,
the EPA announced on March 2.
PFOA is used to make the nonstick coatings on microwave popcorn
bags, cookware, fabrics, and other goods. The chemical, which
contaminates water, air, and wildlife, is ubiquitous in people's
blood (SN: 11/26/05, p. 341), but scientists aren't sure how
it gets into the bloodstream.
DuPont of Wilmington, Del., the sole U.S.-based manufacturer
and the first to sign on to the phaseout program, agreed last
December to pay a fine of $16.5 million to settle charges
(SN: 7/31/04, p. 78) that it withheld data on releases of
PFOA and their effects on people.--B.H.
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