Small towns face high costs to remove PFAS from drinking water

The Environmental Protection Agency's new limits for PFAS in drinking water are pushing utilities to adopt advanced treatment technologies, but funding remains a significant challenge.

Britt E. Erickson reports for Chemical & Engineering News.


In short:

  • The EPA's new PFAS limits in drinking water will require thousands of utilities to adopt expensive treatment processes in the next five years. The agency estimates it'll cost $15 billion over a decade to build systems that meet the new limits.
  • Regenerable ion-exchange resins and granular activated carbon are among the key technologies being explored for PFAS removal.
  • Challenges are not limited to funding. There are sustainability questions regarding the PFAS removal medias disposal, as well as potential supply chain issues from soaring demand for PFAS removal media.

Key quote:

"We can take a solvent that is fit for human contact and pass it through the media. We extract the PFAS off of the media and then that extract goes to our PFAS Annihilator for closed-loop destruction."

— David Trueba, CEO of the Battelle Memorial Institute spin-off Revive Environmental.

Why this matters:

Communities are facing a double-edged sword: while there's an urgent need to comply with EPA standards to protect public health, the funding required to do so is substantial. Federal and state assistance is crucial, but current allocations fall short of what’s needed for comprehensive nationwide compliance.

Advocates argue that without sufficient funding, the burden may fall on consumers through increased water bills, which could disproportionately affect low-income households.

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.

You Might Also Like

Recent

Top environmental health news from around the world.

Environmental Health News

Your support of EHN, a newsroom powered by Environmental Health Sciences, drives science into public discussions. When you support our work, you support impactful journalism. It all improves the health of our communities. Thank you!

donate