Minnesota's challenge in eliminating pervasive 'forever chemicals'

Minnesota's ambitious move to eliminate PFAS, known as 'forever chemicals', from a wide range of consumer products presents significant challenges due to the lack of viable alternatives.

Brooks Johnson and Chloe Johnson report for the Star Tribune.


In short:

  • Minnesota is outlawing PFAS, chemicals found in numerous consumer products, due to their significant health and environmental impacts.
  • The phase-out of PFAS, which are used for their water-proofing and stain-resistant properties, poses a billion-dollar challenge for companies like 3M.
  • Finding safe and effective alternatives for PFAS is proving difficult, impacting industries from cookware to firefighting equipment.

Key quote:

"Safe, economically-feasible alternatives are not there; they're not readily available."

— Allison Lange Garrison, product liability and complex litigation attorney

Why this matters:

The move to eliminate PFAS in Minnesota underscores a growing awareness of the health risks posed by these chemicals. This shift not only impacts consumer products but also reflects a broader national conversation on environmental health and safety.

Related: Minnesota enacts nation’s broadest ban of “forever chemicals.”

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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