New Health Concerns Over
Synthetic Playing Fields
By
Sarah Okeson
Toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” that are associated with cancer and birth defects could lace the artificial turf playing fields that our nation’s athletes compete on in football, rugby, soccer and other sports.
Tests by the Ecology
Center, a nonprofit in Michigan, found a marker chemical that
suggests PFAS is present in the blades of fake grass used
in artificial turf touted by the turf industry as an environmental alternative to
real grass.
Tests also found two types of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, in the backing of artificial turf.
Tests also found two types of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, in the backing of artificial turf.
“PFAS in synthetic
turf should sound alarm bells for parents and for all municipalities with these
fields,” said Kyla Bennett of Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
“For the health of our children and communities, we urgently need to take a hard look at PFAS in synthetic turf.”
“For the health of our children and communities, we urgently need to take a hard look at PFAS in synthetic turf.”
Fake grass is used in
between 12,000 to 13,000 sports fields in our nation.
Artificial turf,
installed in the Houston Astrodome in
1966, is used in 12,000 to 13,000 sports fields in
our nation.
Artificial turf is popular because it helps fields drain well when it rains so events like soccer games don’t need to be postponed. The industry earns $2.5 billion a year with businesses like Shaw Sports Turf, owned by Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway.
Artificial turf is popular because it helps fields drain well when it rains so events like soccer games don’t need to be postponed. The industry earns $2.5 billion a year with businesses like Shaw Sports Turf, owned by Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway.
Shaw Industries said
PFAS “chemicals are commonly used by
synthetic turf manufacturers as a non-stick agent.”
Graham Peaslee, a professor of nuclear
physics at the University of Notre Dame who has studied PFAS, said the
discovery of PFAS in artificial turf means the chemicals could also be found
in other products where
they were used in manufacturing to keep material from sticking.
Betsy Southerland, the
former director of science and technology at the EPA Office of Water, said the
agency could ask artificial turf manufacturers for information about possible
hazards.
“Is this an issue with
just older turf that was made before x date or is it a current problem?”
Southerland asked.
She compared the risk
of groundwater contamination from PFAS in artificial turf to that from firefighting foam which
has contaminated drinking water in at least 297 military bases. Up
to 110 million Americans could
have drinking water contaminated with PFAS.
Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility, a watchdog group,
and the Ecology Center filed a complaint in August
about an EPA report in which the agency decided not to test the grass blades
and backing of artificial turf.
The report which minimized risks from
recycled tires used as filler in artificial turf was produced by the EPA Office of Research and Development which hasn’t had a Senate-confirmed leader since 2012 and
the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.
David Dunlap, a deputy in the EPA office, was previously the foremost expert for Koch Industries on water and chemical regulations.
David Dunlap, a deputy in the EPA office, was previously the foremost expert for Koch Industries on water and chemical regulations.
“EPA has abandoned its
mission of protecting public health,” said Tim Whitehouse, the
executive director of PEER.
The PFAS substances
that the Ecology Center found in the backing of artificial turf are 6:2 FTSA
which can kill rats and PFOA
which has a half-life of 92 years in
the environment and is associated with cancer.
ACTION BOX/What You Can
Do About It
(For what it's worth) tell David Dunlap at the
EPA your thoughts on the safety of playing fields for youth sports and other
athletes.
Call him at 202-564-6620 or mail him at Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Mail Code 8101R, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20460.
Call him at 202-564-6620 or mail him at Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Mail Code 8101R, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20460.
Contact the Ecology
Center at 734-761-3186 or online.