January 15, 2009
Bush to issue last-minute rules on C8
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Click here to read the EPA advisory

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Less than a week before leaving office, the Bush administration is preparing to issue an emergency health advisory for drinking water polluted with the toxic chemical C8.

The advisory is far less protective than environmental groups say is necessary, and much weaker than a guideline issued in New Jersey by the woman President-elect Barack Obama has picked to run the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The administration's surprise move comes as EPA scientists quietly investigate concerns that C8 contaminated the food chain through beef, after tainted sewage sludge was dumped on agricultural land in Alabama.

EPA officials reported privately that they had planned to announce the action sometime Wednesday. But by early evening, no announcement had been made, and several EPA media spokespeople did not respond to requests for comment or interviews with agency staff involved.

C8 is another name for ammonium perfluorooctanoate, or PFOA. DuPont Co. has used the chemical since the 1950s at its Washington Works plant south of Parkersburg. C8 is a processing agent used to make Teflon and other nonstick products, oil-resistant paper packaging and stain-resistant textiles.

Around the world, researchers are finding that people have C8 and other perfluorochemicals, or PFCs, in their blood at low levels. Evidence is mounting about the chemical's dangerous effects, but regulators have yet to set a binding federal limit for emissions or human exposure.

Now, EPA plans to recommend reducing consumption of water that contains more than 0.4 parts per billion of C8, according to a draft of the agency advisory obtained by the Gazette.

The advisory level is tighter than a guideline in effect for residents near the DuPont Parkersburg plant.

But the Parkersburg-area standard and the new EPA advisory are both 10 times weaker than a similar C8 water guideline set by New Jersey Environmental Commissioner Lisa Jackson. This morning, Jackson is appearing at a Senate confirmation hearing for her nomination as President-elect Barack Obama's EPA administrator.

One possible difference is that New Jersey set its standard to protect residents from the long-term effects of drinking small amounts of C8 in their household water. EPA set the Parkersburg limit as an emergency standard to protect the public from "an imminent and substantial endangerment" from short-term exposure to C8.

It's not clear whether the new EPA advisory is intended to protect against short- or long-term exposure. Several EPA staffers have urged top agency officials to give the public "specification of the time frame for which the Provisional Health Advisory was derived," according to a summary of peer-review agency comments.

DuPont, which also owns a huge plant in Deepwater, N.J., has been lobbying hard for that state to modify its current C8 rules.

The chemical company agreed to the Parkersburg limit - 0.5 parts per billion - as part of a deal with EPA. DuPont was required to provide treatment equipment or alternative water where the limit was exceeded.

It was not immediately clear what - if any - water supplies around the country might be affected by the EPA action.

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