PFAS increasingly added to pesticides, study finds
Despite widespread alarm about the health and environmental impacts of toxic PFAS, the chemicals are increasingly being added to pesticides applied in homes and crops across the US, according to a new study.
The findings, published July 24 in the journal Environmental
Health Perspectives, add to growing concerns about PFAS contamination in
the US food system and waterways and highlight pesticides’ “underappreciated”
role in the problem, said David Andrews, a senior scientist at the
Environmental Working Group and an author of the study
The study revealed that per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFAS) account for 14% of all active ingredients in pesticides used
in the US, including almost one-third of active ingredients approved in the
last decade. Even when PFAS are not intentionally added to these products, the
fluorinated containers in which they are stored have been found to leach PFAS
into their contents, the study concluded.
“This is truly frightening news, because pesticides are some of the most widely dispersed pollutants in the world,” Nathan Donley, the environmental health science director at the Center for Biological Diversity and an author of the study, said in a statement. “Lacing pesticides with forever chemicals is likely burdening the next generation with more chronic diseases and impossible cleanup responsibilities.”
The authors reviewed pesticide data from the US EPA, the
US Geological Survey, and the Canadian Pest Management Regulatory Agency, as
well as publicly available databases, finding that PFAS-laced pesticides are
regularly used nationwide on staple crops including corn, wheat, kale, spinach,
apples and strawberries. PFAS are also common ingredients in flea treatments
for pets and sprays to kill insects, they found.
The study comes on the heels of a petition delivered
to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Monday by the Center for
Food Safety and other nonprofits asking the agency to ban PFAS in pesticides.
Regulatory concerns
PFAS have been used for decades in a wide variety of
consumer products. Some of the so-called “forever chemicals” have been linked
to cancers, damage to organs and the immune system, and other health problems.
One of the same qualities that make PFAS concerning to
environmental and health advocates – their resistance to breaking down – also
makes them attractive to pesticide manufacturers because it makes their
products last longer, said Andrews.
Even as the use of PFAS in pesticides has climbed since
2012, the EPA has granted nearly all requests to bypass a requirement to assess
how active ingredients affect the immune system, a “troubling” pattern that
suggests health effects from these chemicals in pesticides may not be accounted
for, the authors write.
“The regulations surrounding pesticides are currently
outdated and ineffective, so this discovery of PFAS presence in pesticide
formulations represents a new opportunity for the EPA to improve the scientific
validity of pesticide risk assessment to better capture real-world exposure
scenarios,” scientists from Emory University who were not involved in the study
wrote in a related perspective article.
In 2021, the EPA announced its PFAS Strategic Roadmap,
which outlined a strategy for cleaning up PFAS contamination and curbing the
further spread of the toxic chemicals into the environment. This spring, the
agency set enforceable limits for
six PFAS chemicals in drinking water. Earlier this month, in response to a
petition from environmental groups, the EPA initiated a
regulatory risk management process under the Toxic Substances Control Act to
address concerns about PFAS leaching from fluorinated containers.
After testing 10 pesticide products for PFAS, the agency
released a memo in May
2023 stating that it did not find any PFAS in the products. The agency may have
incorrectly reported some of these PFAS test results, alleges the
watchdog group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), which
said it obtained testing data through a Freedom of Information Act request that
shows the EPA had actually found PFAS in the products it tested.
A spokesperson for the EPA said the agency is currently
reviewing the new Environmental Health Perspectives study.
“EPA shares communities’ concerns regarding the potential
risks posed by PFAS and the need for more data to better understand and address
these risks in communities all across America,” said the EPA in an email. “EPA
is committed to addressing the risks from PFAS from all sources, including
pesticides.”