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    « DuPont's 3Q Profits Match Potential Teflon Fine | Main | Memorial Service for Mary Beth Doyle »

    October 27, 2004

    Rocket Fuel Plume Discovered Near D.C.'s Drinking Water Supply

    The Washington Post reports that a toxic chemical component of rocket fuel,
    in concentrations 80 times what the Environmental Protection Agency
    considers safe for human consumption, has been found near a reservoir that
    supplies drinking water to the District of Columbia.

    Although health officials insist there is no immediate threat to the
    District's drinking water supplies, the discovery – which the agency kept
    quiet for more than a year – sharpens the nationwide debate over the health
    threats of perchlorate, which is known to contaminate water or soil in more
    than 40 states. At most of the hundreds of sites of known contamination, the
    chemical leaked from military bases or defense plants.

    The EPA's preliminary risk assessment says drinking water concentrations of
    perchlorate of more than 1 part per billion (ppb) are unsafe, and pose a
    particular risk for pregnant women, fetuses and infants. The chemical can
    disrupt normal functioning of the thyroid gland, which controls growth and
    development, leading to learning disabilities and deficiencies in motor
    skills.

    The EPA's risk assessment is under review by the National Academy of
    Sciences, but officials in Massachusetts and California agree that very low
    levels of perchlorate are a health risk. Massachusetts has set a limit of 1
    ppb in drinking water, while California's standard is 6 ppb. Both are in
    sharp contrast to claims by the Pentagon and defense contractors that
    perchlorate is safe at up to 200 ppb.

    EWG, which has conducted a series of groundbreaking studies on perchlorate,
    argues that a drinking water standard should be no more than one-tenth the
    EPA's current recommendation, or 0.1 ppb. EWG's tests have found perchlorate
    in lettuce and milk, and other researchers have found it in a wide range of
    food crops.

    View EWG's studies
    Read The Washington Post coverage

    « DuPont's 3Q Profits Match Potential Teflon Fine |