The George Rogers Clark Memorial bridge crosses the Ohio River to Louisville, Kentucky.
Visions of America/Joseph Sohm/Common Pictures Group by way of Getty Pictures
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Visions of America/Joseph Sohm/Common Pictures Group by way of Getty Pictures
The Ohio River sends billions of gallons of water flowing previous Louisville, Kentucky’s pumping station daily, the place town’s utility sucks it as much as flip it into faucet water.
To make sure it tastes good and is protected to drink, a small staff of scientists and technicians is continually testing the water for pH, odors, heavy metals and microbes.
However in contrast to many smaller municipal utilities throughout the U.S., the Louisville Water Firm usually checks for PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances).
That is a category of chemical substances, utilized by producers for many years to make issues like nonstick pans, cosmetics, raincoats, meals wrappers and firefighting foam.
Analysis research have linked PFAS to well being dangers like most cancers, lowered immune system functioning, excessive ldl cholesterol, and developmental delays in youngsters.
They’re often known as “ceaselessly chemical substances” as a result of they’re virtually indestructible. Their sturdy chemical buildings make them degrade extremely slowly within the surroundings.
Right now, they litter soil and water sources internationally and might be discovered within the blood of virtually everybody within the U.S.
One sort of PFAS that the Louisville water technicians are monitoring is HFPO-DA, although it is maybe higher recognized by a commerce title, GenX.
Virtually a yr in the past, staff seen an sudden spike within the degree of GenX detected in a pattern of the uncooked, untreated water drawn from the Ohio River for filtering and processing.
In water, PFAS focus is measured in components per trillion. The GenX ranges they discovered final December had been 15 occasions larger than the earlier month: 52 components per trillion versus 3.4 components per trillion.
“A component per trillion is like one second in 32,800 years. Put your head round that, proper?” stated Peter Goodmann, town utility’s director of water high quality and analysis.
One other means to consider it: One half per trillion could be a single drop inside 20 Olympic swimming swimming pools.
So the elevated ranges had been nonetheless fairly low, he stated.
A Louisville Water Co. ingesting fountain, with a pump home within the distance.
Morgan Watkins/Louisville Public Media
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Morgan Watkins/Louisville Public Media
However Goodman’s staff was interested in what was happening. They traced the chemical up the Ohio River, previous Cincinnati and thru Appalachian forests, all the best way to a West Virginia manufacturing unit about 400 miles upstream.
There, the Chemours Co. makes use of GenX to make fluoropolymers, a particular plastic crucial to the semiconductors that energy our telephones.
Its Washington Works facility close to Parkersburg, West Virginia, additionally has a infamous historical past of PFAS air pollution.
A lawyer, Robert Bilott, fought the plant’s earlier proprietor, DuPont, in courtroom and in the end revealed the corporate knew {that a} sort of PFAS it was utilizing, referred to as PFOA, was poisonous however did not disclose that info.
DuPont went on to settle numerous lawsuits claiming it contaminated native environments with ceaselessly chemical substances, though the corporate repeatedly has denied wrongdoing.
Chemours was spun off from DuPont in 2015.
What Louisville’s sudden spike means
On the Louisville Water Co., the staff’s calculations ultimately confirmed that the December 2024 spike in GenX ranges corresponded to publicly-available knowledge from Chemours, about its chemical discharges into the Ohio River.
Nonetheless, Goodman informed NPR he wasn’t nervous about native prospects’ security — even with final yr’s spike.
That is as a result of dangers posed by low PFAS concentrations are measured over a lifetime of publicity, he stated. And up to date knowledge from Louisville present the PFAS ranges in metropolis ingesting water fell inside deliberate federal security limits.
Plus, water is only one means folks might be uncovered to PFAS, Goodman added. “Since you get much more of those pollution from packaging, from prefixed meals, cake mixes, bizarre issues, you recognize, popcorn packing containers,” he stated.
Chemours didn’t return a request for remark NPR.
However in Chemours’ responses to a lawsuit filed by a West Virginia environmental group, the corporate denied their discharges are related to Louisville’s GenX spike. (Louisville isn’t a celebration within the lawsuit.)
The corporate additionally contended that sampling knowledge confirmed ranges of GenX within the river and in downstream utilities’ handled ingesting water are “indisputably protected.”
Louisville Water’s knowledge confirmed the water pattern it drew in December 2024 had elevated GenX ranges, in comparison with earlier months.
However after the water underwent typical remedy and filtering, the extent fell underneath the brand new federal security restrict, which is not scheduled to kick in till 2029.
The federal authorities has lengthy regulated the degrees of sure contaminants in ingesting water, like arsenic, E. coli and lead.
However the EPA did not situation laws relating to PFAS till 2024, through the closing yr of the Biden administration.
The brand new limits apply to six forms of PFAS in ingesting water. Beginning in 2029, utilities which exceed the boundaries could be required to deal with the water to scale back the contamination.
After Trump’s re-election, his new EPA administrator Lee Zeldin introduced the company will preserve the principles for under two forms of PFAS, referred to as PFOA and PFOS, however drop the restrictions on the opposite 4 sorts, together with GenX.
As well as, the EPA introduced it’ll give water utilities two extra years, till 2031, to adjust to the remaining guidelines, partially due to the monetary burden on rural water vegetation.
Many utilities, massive and small, in all probability might want to put money into infrastructure to take away PFAS.
A federal research estimated about 45% of U.S. faucet water comprises at the least one sort of PFAS.
When it introduced the ultimate PFAS limits, the Biden administration anticipated that as much as 10% of the estimated 66,000 U.S. public ingesting water methods affected by these laws may need PFAS ranges excessive sufficient to require them to take motion to scale back the contamination.
PFAS elimination will problem water utilities
Underneath present federal environmental laws, Chemours can launch some chemical substances into the Ohio River. But it surely has exceeded the authorized limits repeatedly over a number of years, based on courtroom filings and the U.S. Environmental Safety Company.
That is why the West Virginia Rivers Coalition filed its lawsuit in 2024.
The EPA took enforcement motion in 2023, when it stated it discovered Chemours’ West Virginia manufacturing unit had repeatedly exceeded allow limits for 2 forms of ceaselessly chemical substances, GenX and PFOA.
However West Virginia Rivers Coalition stated in a courtroom submitting that the EPA’s consent order for Chemours “isn’t being diligently prosecuted.”
Chemours declined to reply questions from NPR, citing ongoing litigation, besides to level out that Louisville’s “completed ingesting water is protected for consumption” as a result of the PFAS ranges are beneath the EPA’s regulatory limits, as said on Louisville Water’s personal web site, and within the annual water high quality report of Cincinnati, which additionally attracts from the Ohio River.
As analysis into the well being results of PFAS publicity continues, environmental advocates say it is crucial for corporations to satisfy the restrictions set by authorities permits.
“Environmental regulatory allowing is a license to pollute,” stated Nick Hart, water coverage director for the Kentucky Waterways Alliance.
“You are allowing somebody to place one thing into the environment, into water, into soil that might not be there in any other case. And so after we speak in regards to the protected ranges … cease utilizing the phrase ‘protected,’ proper? That is the utmost allowable restrict.”
It’s potential to take away PFAS from ingesting water. For instance, Louisville’s utility is spending about $23 million to revamp its powdered activated carbon system, which is one methodology used to take out PFAS.
However PFAS elimination can get costly, particularly for small, rural cities, Hart stated. Stopping contaminants like PFAS from getting right into a neighborhood’s ingesting water provide is less complicated and more cost effective, in comparison with eradicating it on the again finish, he added.
In Chemours’ responses to the lawsuit, the corporate acknowledged that it is violating its present allow however famous it is working with authorities regulators on an eventual repair.
Nonetheless, the federal choose within the case, Joseph Goodwin, determined that wasn’t quick sufficient.
In August, he ordered Chemours to right away cease over-polluting. The corporate rapidly filed an attraction.
The West Virginia Rivers Coalition, which filed the lawsuit, declined to talk with NPR however did level to its August information launch on the choose’s ruling.
“This can be a victory for public well being and the Ohio River,” Autumn Crowe, the group’s deputy director, stated in an announcement. “The Courtroom acknowledged what communities have recognized for years: Chemours has been polluting our water and ignoring its authorized obligations.”
In a courtroom submitting for the case, Goodmann stated that elevated ranges of GenX may make it tougher for water utilities like Louisville’s to adjust to federal guidelines for protected ingesting water.
With regard to Chemours particularly, Goodmann informed NPR that when authorities regulators situation the corporate’s subsequent allow, he desires them to consider the water remedy vegetation downstream.
“So what we do is handle danger, and we begin that on the river,” he stated. “It sounds bizarre, however supply water safety – conserving the stuff out of the river – is a giant deal.”
This story comes from NPR’s well being reporting partnership with Louisville Public Media and KFF Well being Information.





