WASHINGTON — Facing billions of dollars in cleanup costs,
the Pentagon is pushing the Trump administration to adopt a weaker standard for
groundwater pollution caused by chemicals that have commonly been used at
military bases and that contaminate drinking water consumed by millions of
Americans.
The Pentagon’s position pits it against the Environmental
Protection Agency, which is seeking White House signoff for standards that
would most likely require expensive cleanup programs at scores of military
bases, as well as at NASA launch sites, airports and some manufacturing
facilities.
Despite its deregulatory record under President Trump, the
E.P.A. has been seeking to stick with a tougher standard for the presence of
the chemicals in question in the face of the pressure from the military to
adopt a far looser framework.
How the administration resolves the fight has potentially
enormous consequences for how the United States is going to confront what a top
official at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called “one of
the most seminal public health challenges” of the coming decades.
The problem is not limited to military bases. An estimated
five million to 10 million people in the country may be drinking water laced
with high levels of the chemicals, known as Per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances,
or highly fluorinated chemicals. They include thousands of people who live near
military bases in states including Michigan, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts.
PFAS, as the chemicals are most commonly called, are present
in a vast array of products, including food packaging, nonstick pans, clothing
and furniture. They have been linked in recent years to cancers, immune
suppression and other serious health problems.
But since the 1970s, the Defense Department has been one of
the most frequent users of PFAS. The chemicals are a key ingredient in
firefighting foam employed at bases nationwide, with military crews spraying
large amounts during training exercises (and on emergency calls) into unlined
basins that drain into the soil and then into groundwater.
In 2017, after military communities around the country began
to report alarming levels of PFAS in their drinking water, the Pentagon
confirmed that there were 401 known military facilities in the United States
where it was used.
Further study by the Pentagon concluded that the PFAS
contamination had turned up in drinking water or groundwater in at least 126 of
these locations, with some of them involving systems that provide water to tens
of thousands of people both on the bases and in nearby neighborhoods. In some
instances, the Defense Department is providing temporary replacement water
supplies.
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