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A rock and a hard place: Mercury pollution from common household products
This is a rather instructive story, I think:
Since the angelically named Clear Skies Act of 2003 was enacted, mercury levels in bodies of water in Lincoln County, Maine have risen steadily. So, in fact, have mercury levels in bodies of water around the country. The act "weakens controls on mercury pollution levels" and has resulted in increasing numbers of fish consumption warnings and the many other problems that go along with heightened methylmercury levels -- including, for the unfortunate loon population, reproductive and development problems. Lack of restriction on coal plants has played a large role in the increase in mercury pollution, and nine states filed a lawsuit against the EPA to that effect.
Meanwhile, according to an employee of the Association of Metropolitan Sewage Agencies (AMSA) as reported to The Lincoln County News:
"There's an effluent limit for our wastewater plant for mercury, and it's 20.9 parts per trillion," said Bowers, "and it's amazing to look at the AMSA's mercury concentration list of toiletries, common household and food products and find Kool-Aid Mountain Twists has 6,070 ng/kg (nanograms/kilograms) or 6,070 parts per trillion of mercury."
Kool-Aid Mountain Twists aren't the only household item containing mercury, either. Specific brands of toothpaste, soap, bathroom tissue and dishwasher gel also make AMSA's watchlist (note how the remnants of all of those products end up right back in the wastewater). It's not that mercury is included as an ingredient. It's that the process for manufacturing those particular goods uses mercury, and trace amounts remain when the product is finished. Larger amounts of mercury are found in household bleach and many soaps.
It's not as a direct threat to human health that these trace levels become a problem, although I admit I'm not pleased to think of any amount of exposure to toxic mercury. The real problem is when those trace amounts make it back into wastewater effluent, where mercury is metabolized by bacteria into bio-accumulative methylmercury. That's the stuff that builds up in bodies as it goes up the food chain, so by the time it gets to the fish you and I eat it's a big issue.
All of which leaves us precisely here: Railing against mercury contamination from coal plants while flushing more mercury into the environment. Wonderful.
So, what can we do?
V. informative! I didn't know about the toothpaste issue. But I use Tom's, and do all of the stuff you suggested above, I'm happy to say! Though I haven't been able to singlehandedly get rid of coal plants....
Hah! Well if you find a way, Siel, be sure and let us know. Glad you liked the post!
Those are great suggestions to reduce the amount of mercury in our waste streams. But a very important question remains: How does mercury get into our toiletries? Some of the largest, and often overlooked, sources of mercury pollution are chlorine manufacturing plants that continue to use outdated mercury cell technology while more than 90% of the chlorine produced in the United States uses mercury-free technology. Chlor-alkali plants, as they’re called in industry lingo, make chlorine and caustic soda, also known more commonly as lye. There are only four chlor-alkali plants in the United States that have refused to upgrade to mercury-free technology. In 2005, one of these plants, the Olin chlor-alkali plant in Charleston, Tennessee reported releasing 1,250 pounds of mercury into the air, which made it the largest source of mercury pollution in the entire state. The chlor-alkali industry’s dirty little secret is that some of their mercury gets into their final products: chlorine and caustic soda.
Chlorine is used in everything from cosmetics and perfume, to toothpaste and decaffeinated coffee. Caustic soda ends up in numerous other products as well, including soaps and textiles. It is no wonder that so many household items are contaminated considering mercury could have been used as a production agent! While the levels of mercury in these consumer products are low and are unlikely to cause any harmful effect to people, it’s an unnecessary amount of mercury since chlorine and lye can be produced without mercury contamination. For more information, check out our mercury web page.