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Related: About this forumNo Carolina Residents Urge UN to Investigate PFAS Pollution, Forever Chems: Cancer, Health Issues
North Carolina residents urge UN to investigate toxic PFAS pollution. The Guardian, April 28, 2023. Ed.
- Chemical manufacturer Chemours accused of violating human rights by releasing forever chemicals into Cape Fear River basin. -
A citizens group in North Carolina has formally requested the United Nations to investigate multiple alleged human rights violations stemming from chemical manufacturer Chemours toxic PFAS pollution in the region. About a half million residents live in the Cape Fear River basin between Fayetteville and Wilmington, where Chemours has produced PFAS and polluted the region for over 40 years. The residents face an environmental human rights crisis
involving pervasive human exposure to toxic chemicals, according to a communication filed with the UN by Clean Cape Fear and the University of California at Berkeley Environmental Law Clinic.
PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a class of about 14,000 chemicals often used to make products resistant to water, stains and heat. They are called forever chemicals because they are virtually indestructible, and they are linked to cancer, liver problems, thyroid issues, birth defects, kidney disease, decreased immunity and other serious health problems. UN human rights commission investigation there would be the first to look into an environmental crisis in the US. Residents say they have been denied the right to clean water, bodily integrity, information, an effective remedy, and a clean, healthy and sustainable environment.
University researchers first discovered the pollution in 2017, and North Carolinians are in disbelief that we are still living with this, said Clean Cape Fear co-founder Emily Donovan, who resides near Wilmington. Were nearly 6 years into this and my kids still go to a school that has water with high levels of PFAS, she added. Everyone is aware of the problem
and is outraged, and were all asking, Why is this still going on? Chemours is among the worlds largest PFAS producers, and last year the Guardian detailed how pollution from its Fayetteville Works plant has contaminated the air, soil, and water throughout hundreds of square miles in the Cape Fear River basin.
For decades, many residents unknowingly drank water contaminated with PFAS at levels thousands of times above what the EPA now considers safe for some compounds. The chemicals have also been found in food grown in the region.
At popular tourist beaches, children have played in toxic PFAS foam spread across the sand, and the chemicals are thought to be killing pets & sickening alligators, birds & fish in the basin. Residents suspect the pollution is behind anecdotally high levels of cancer and other diseases linked to exposure to the chemicals. Though a brief state health department analysis found elevated levels of one kind of cancer, it and the EPA have refused to carry out the kind of epidemiological studies needed to determine the pollutions full health effects, & which are required to hold Chemours legally responsible for health problems.. The UN in 2021 investigated alleged human rights violations in Veneto, Italy, where the environment was also thoroughly contaminated by PFAS. That inspired those in the Cape Fear basin...https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/apr/28/north-carolina-toxic-pfas-pollution-chemours